Medical Marijuana Update

Submitted by Phillip Smith on (Issue #727)

More DEA raids in California, more threat letters in Colorado, plus action from the statehouse to the courthouse. Just another week in medical marijuana politics.

[image:1 align:right]Arkansas

Signature gathering is underway for a proposed medical marijuana initiative sponsored by Arkansans for Compassionate Care. The initiative would allow patients with serious or debilitating medical conditions to use and possess marijuana and to purchase it from state-regulated, nonprofit dispensaries. Patients could grow their own if they live more than five miles from a dispensary. The campaign needs to gather 65,000 valid voter signatures by July to make the November ballot.

California

Last Tuesday, the Richmond city council voted to double the number of dispensaries in the city. The council approved an ordinance allowing up to six dispensaries, or one for every 17,000 residents. Oakland, by contrast, only allows one for every 50,000 residents. Right now, though, even the three dispensaries already permitted haven't opened.

Last Wednesday, the LAPD raided the Nature's Answer dispensary in Reseda, seizing 50 pounds of pot and $17,000 in cash. Owner Annie Bishop was arrested for possession for sales of marijuana. They also raided her home in Van Nuys. LAPD is taking the position that medical marijuana sales are illegal.

Last Thursday, DEA and local police raided a Temecula dispensary, the Co-Op Social Club. The raid came just days after the DEA raided another Riverside County dispensary, the Greenhouse Cannabis Club in Murrieta. That same day, the DEA raided a Lake Elsinore medical marijuana grow-op, the Consolidated Container Nursery as part of the same investigation.

That same day, two men struck a plea bargain over their role in the North Bay Dispensary in Newark. The dispensary was raided by the DEA last year, but the pair copped to state charges and received jail sentences of one and five days, which they already served after being arrested. Charges against three dispensary employees were dropped. Meanwhile, a civil dispute between the NBD Collective and the city of Newark, which started almost as soon as the club opened in 2009, is still ongoing.

Also last Thursday, the UFCW announced it was unionizing Los Angeles dispensary workers. "This is the next step in professionalizing and stabilizing this new sector of the health care industry," said Local 770 president Rick Icaza in a press release. "Unionization and collective bargaining bring better training, less turnover, and more stability to the health care industry. This is a positive step towards successfully integrating compassionate care into our system of health care."

Last Friday, signature gathering began for an Imperial Beach initiative, the Safe Access Ordinance, which would overturn the city's current ban on dispensaries and replace it with zoning and other regulations for dispensing collectives and cooperatives wishing to operate in the city. The move comes after more than two years of tussles with the city, which has adopted an outright ban on dispensaries. The initiative is a joint effort of Canvass for a Cause, Americans for Safe Access, and concerned citizens in Imperial Beach. Organizers need 1,000 valid signatures to get on the ballot and hope to collect 2,000.

On Sunday, California NORML reported that Assemblywoman Nora Campos (D-San Jose) had introduced a bill, Assembly Bill 2465, which would require all medical marijuana patients to register with the state. The bill is sponsored by the Police Officers' Research Association of California, which wants to make it easier for police to distinguish between illegal and legal marijuana users. California NORML strongly opposes the bill, saying it infringes on patients' right under Prop 215 to legally possess and cultivate marijuana given a physician's written OR oral recommendation.

On Tuesday, the Redding city council vote not to appeal a judge's ruling that rejected the city's request for a preliminary injunction on medical marijuana storefront collectives. That means dispensaries can continue to operate in the Shasta County community. Redding's elected officials have said they were surprised and confused by Shasta County Superior Court Judge Stephen Baker's decision, handed down late last Wednesday.

Also on Tuesday, the Daly City city council voted to ban dispensaries, with Councilman David Canepa saying he'd allow the clubs over his "dead body." Council members cited a report from Police Chief Manuel Martinez that noted the city has a problem with illegal indoor pot grows.

Also on Tuesday, a Santa Monica marijuana testing facility filed a lawsuit against the city to force it to give it a business license, which it has so far refused to do. Golden State Collective, the testing firm, applied for a business license in December, but was turned down even though it is not a dispensary. The facility opened this month, but closed again after being informed it could be fined.

Colorado

Last Friday, US Attorney John Walsh sent threat letters to 25 more dispensaries. In January, he sent out 23 threat letters, forcing those dispensaries to close. The latest targets have 45 days to close or face the seizure of their property. And there will be more to come, Walsh's office said.

Michigan

Last weekend, the second annual Detroit Medical Marijuana Expo took place, drawing more than 130 vendors and large crowds.

On Wednesday, the Michigan Supreme Court agreed to decide a key issue in conflicts over the state's medical marijuana law: whether patients can sell marijuana to other patients. The case involves the Compassionate Apothecary in Mt. Pleasant, which was targeted by prosecutors in 2010. A lower court found that sales were permitted, but an appeals court disagreed, leading to the closing of the dispensary and many others around the state after the ruling.

Montana

Last Friday, medical marijuana providers targeted by the DEA in raids last year said they would appeal a federal district court ruling dismissing their challenge to those raids. More than a dozen providers, as well as the Montana Cannabis Industry Association, challenged the legality of the federal enforcement operations, but suffered a defeat in January, when US District Judge Donald Molloy, citing the 2005 Raich decision by the US Supreme Court, ruled that state law does not shield providers from federal prosecution. Their appeal goes to the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco.

On Tuesday, another medical marijuana provider pleaded guilty in federal court to charges stemming from the DEA raids of March 2011. Christopher Ryan Durbin of Whitefish operated several medical marijuana businesses, including Good Medicine Providers and a pair of large warehouse grows. DEA agents made undercover buys at Good Medicine and seized more than 1,000 plants at the warehouses. Durbin copped to conspiracy to manufacture and distribute marijuana and structuring bank deposits to avoid IRS reporting requirements. He faces sentencing on June 29.

New Hampshire

On Tuesday, sponsors of a medical marijuana bill held a press conference to try to drum up a veto-proof Senate majority for the bill. State Sen. Jim Forsythe (R-Strafford) and state Rep. Evalyn Merrick (D-Lancaster) worry that Gov. John Lynch will veto the bill because of his historical opposition to such measures.

On Wednesday, the Senate passed the bill on a 13-11 vote. That's not enough to overcome a threatened veto, but the bill still has to go through the House, and that gives supporters time to try to pick up the handful of Senate votes they will need.

New Jersey

Last Friday, one of the nonprofit groups trying to set up a dispensary said it is giving up. The Greenleaf Compassion Center in Montclair is further along in the process than any of the other groups, but CEO Joe Stevens said he was put off by repeated delays and that he has no faith in state officials anymore. The state's law was passed more than two years ago, but none of the six dispensaries allowed by the law have opened, due to delays by the Christie administration and NIMBYism in local communities.

Rhode Island

On Wednesday, lawmakers were set to consider compromise dispensary legislation, House Bill 7888, that would allow the three state-designated outlets to open. Gov. Lincoln Chafee (I) blocked them last year after the state's US Attorney warned they could be prosecuted under federal law. The compromise would limit the amount of marijuana dispensaries could have, but that had advocates worried limits too low would make them economically unviable. Also getting a hearing Wednesday, are a pair of bills sponsored by Attorney General Peter Kilmartin, Senate Bill 2783 and its companion, House Bill 7960, that would impose various restrictions on the state program. Some medical marijuana proponents are cosponsoring the bills in a bid to get a say in their final forms. As of late Wednesday evening, there were no reports back from Providence.

Tennessee

On Tuesday, a medical marijuana bill advanced in the House. A House Health subcommittee approved House Bill 294 on a voice vote. It now goes before the whole House Health Committee. The bill would allow patients with specified diseases or conditions to use medical marijuana and would set up a state-regulated and -licensed distribution system. Its companion measure, SB 251, remains stuck in the Senate Government Operations Committee.

Washington

Last Friday, city of Issaquah planners approved a permit for the GreenLink Collective to open for business. The facility will process and deliver medical marijuana to qualified patients, offer classes and information, and sell supplies for people to produce and consume marijuana under a framework established by state law. GreenLink does not intend to grow marijuana in the space. State law allows up to 10 qualifying patients to join together and form a collective garden of up to 45 plants, so long as the marijuana is not visible from public spaces. GreenLink operators must also install a security system and cameras onsite. The collective first opened in 2010, but city officials refused to give it a business license, then, in June 2011, the city council imposed a moratorium on collective gardens. The council adopted new rules governing collectives in December, and now GreenLink has its permit.

Washington, DC

On Friday, DC is set to announce who will get the five marijuana cultivation permits for the city's long-awaited medical marijuana dispensaries. The city has authorized up to ten sites, but only five will be announced Friday.

West Virginia

Last Wednesday, the Marijuana Policy Project announced that a medical marijuana bill, House Bill 4498 had been denied a hearing in the House Health and Human Resources Committee. The bill's sponsor, Del. Mike Manypenny (D-Grafton) will attempt to keep the issue alive by offering a resolution, HCR 144, calling for the legislature to study medical marijuana more thoroughly.

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Comments

Nemo (not verified)

I have to wonder how many newly-raided Californian dispensary owners worked to defeat Prop19?

Reap what you sow, reap what you sow...

Thu, 03/29/2012 - 3:12pm Permalink
Jus'sayin' (not verified)

In reply to by Nemo (not verified)

I was disgusted by the whole "Stoners Against Prop 19" group, and the greedy dispensary owners behind it. Now the DEA is back on the offensive, which doesn't surprise me a bit. In a political climate like ours, across-the-board legalization is the only way to be sure patients' have safe access to their medicinal Cannabis.

Let this be a lesson to us all: Don't let the mythical "Perfect Ballot Initiative" distract us from the goal of real but incremental improvements to our broken drug policies.

Fri, 03/30/2012 - 4:39am Permalink
Cindy2012 (not verified)

How can medical cannabis be legal in the District of Columbia, but not legal in the 50 states?  Per the US Constitution, Article 1, Section 8, Clause 17, Congress has the power to exercise exclusive Legislation in all cases Whatsoever... and when they are legislating on behalf of District residents, they are, by default, legislating on behalf of the nation.  For Congress to approve DC's medical cannabis law, they legalized medical cannabis throughout the United States, not only in DC.  There cannot be two sets of laws-- one for DC residents and one for Americans.

Thu, 03/29/2012 - 5:13pm Permalink
annroc2004 (not verified)

In reply to by Cindy2012 (not verified)

washington dc is set to open " 6 medical marijuana dispensaries ! RIGHT OUTSIDE ERIC HOLDERS OFFICE ! ! !

Yet Eric Holder sends "threatening letters to THE 50 STATES FOR THEM TO CLOSE THEIR DISPENSARIES 1 1

Eric Holder is using the exact same tactics "Drug Dealers use";  get rid of opposing drug dealers and reign supreme !

translation: get rid of STATE'S DISPENSARIES and Washington DC cliniic reign suprmeme WHAT A HYPOCRITE!

Sun, 04/01/2012 - 11:38am Permalink
annroc2004 (not verified)

ps conn. is set to open MMJ dispensaries hopefully this year; according to gov. dan malloy...... ...... .....!

Sun, 04/01/2012 - 11:40am Permalink
budderbreakfast (not verified)

many of us have paid some more of us will stay pay and some of us that have already paid will have to pay more but freedom is definitely starting to ring .  slowly but surely the cat is  coming out of the bag, just be loud as you can be about the medical benefits of cannabis.  make sure everyone you come in contact with hears about it because that is the only way to get reform.  there is still a lot of extremely ignorant people out there and its our exodus out of bondage to show them the light.

Mon, 04/02/2012 - 5:50pm Permalink
Aaronis (not verified)

Nature's Answer is a fraud. Everyone with a brain knows that. Their doctor is not even board certified and they were "writing" certifications for sick patients illegally. They were busted over a year ago after working with Dr. Patil from The Healing Center in Ann Arbor. Nature's Answer has been moving weed into Ohio and Illinois for the past year. They constantly have people with out-of-state plates at their so-called "clinic" where they actually operate as a dispensary off of East Stadium Blvd in Ann Arbor Michigan. The owner was under investigation for writing fake michigan medical marijuana certifications and trying to arrange a deal with a minister who owned a compassion club for over 50 pounds of weed that wasn't even medicinal grade. This should also be noted.

Sun, 06/24/2012 - 12:47pm Permalink
Aaronis (not verified)

Nature's Answer is a fraud. Everyone with a brain knows that. Their doctor is not even board certified and they were "writing" certifications for sick patients illegally. They were busted over a year ago after working with Dr. Patil from The Healing Center in Ann Arbor. Nature's Answer has been moving weed into Ohio and Illinois for the past year. They constantly have people with out-of-state plates at their so-called "clinic" where they actually operate as a dispensary off of East Stadium Blvd in Ann Arbor Michigan. The owner was under investigation for writing fake michigan medical marijuana certifications and trying to arrange a deal with a minister who owned a compassion club for over 50 pounds of weed that wasn't even medicinal grade. This should also be noted. Ask them the name of their doctor and you will easily find out for yourself...

Sun, 06/24/2012 - 12:50pm Permalink

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