Showing posts with label MMMA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MMMA. Show all posts

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Michigan Medical Marijuana Act Does Not Provide Immunity for Collectives

Just prior to the holidays, the Michigan Supreme Court deepened its medical marijuana jurisprudence by deciding another key case applying the Michigan Medical Marijuana Act.  The case, People v Bylsma, arose out of Kent County and is distinctive because it is the first case under the Act that involves a collective grow operation.

Ryan Bylsma was a certified care provider under the MMMA.  He operated a medical marijuana collective with other pot growers.  He claimed that he assisted other farmers with their grow operations and that he only maintained 24 plants in the facility.

Bylsma was busted when a Grand Rapids city inspector observed suspicious wires coming from the structure of the collective.  The inspector forced his way into the structure [without a warrant], observed the extensive marijuana operation, and alerted the Kent County Sheriff.  Nearly 90 plants were seized from the structure.

The collective farmers had a locked facility, but they did not segregate their plants.  All three pot farmers were certified under the act.  Apparently, the structure was traced back to Bylsma from an owership perspective thus, he took the rap for possession of all the plants.

The Kent County Circuit Court trial judge did not buy into Bylsma's assertion that his pot possession within the collective was strictly limited to the 24 plants designated for his two patients.  Bylsma's motion to quash the information was denied and appealed to the Michigan Court of Appeals.

The intermediate appellate court affirmed the trial court, holding that since the strict plant limits and other provisions of the MMMA were not observed by Bylsma, then he could not avail himself of the immunity under section 4 of the Act, nor could he avail himself of the affirmative defenses under section 8 of the Act.

Maintaining consistency with their Kolanek opinion, the Michigan Supreme Court affirmed the intermediate appellate court in holding that, unless an accused complies with all the provisions of the MMMA, the section 4 immunity is not available.  The High Court reversed the Court of Appeals, however, by holding that the Act's section 8 affirmative defenses are available regardless of compliance with the Act.

The decision is significant to the extent that it resolves the issue of whether pot combine owners, partners or participants can combine space and share the protections of the MMMA; they cannot.  Further, this case again emphasizes the shortcomings of the Act with regard to any distribution-for-profit scheme; there are not enumerated in the Act, and the High Court laid the groundwork for striking down any such schemes.

We here at the Law Blogger see the medical marijuana jurisprudence establishing very limited defenses for true medical marijuana pot growers and users.  Those who insist on utilizing the MMMA to turn a profit will continue to be disappointed, while legitimate medical users will be afforded the protections envisioned by the Legislature.

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Thursday, January 14, 2010

What are they Smoking?

This post is the original content of The Michigan Lawyer which is the official blog of Michigan Lawyers Weekly:

What are they smoking?  That’s what Detroit-based Cannabis Counsel lawyer Matthew Abel is asking of the Michigan Senate Judiciary Committee, who is meeting next week to discuss a package of bills which would amend the public health code so that medical marijuana must be dispensed by pharmacists, and to classify medical marijuana as a schedule 2 controlled substance.

“It seems that if the legislature ever passed these bills, they would be in conflict with the medical marijuana statute,” Abel said. “So they’d need a 3/4 vote to supercede the law, and you know that they can’t even get 3/4 of the legislature to agree on lunch, let alone this.”

Southfield-based lawyer Michael Komorn, who also serves as the treasurer for the Michigan Medical Marijuana Association, said the bills are similar to bills introduced last year; last year, the bills which also would have allowed for 10 marijuana growing facilities to be affiliated with a pharmacy, got no traction.

This year’s incarnation of the bills would essentially make all production of medical marijuana illegal, though use would still be protected by law, Komorn said.

“It’s like the stamp act, arcane and without any understanding of what really is going on with patient needs,” Komorn said. “Bottom line, this is an attempt ot repeal the Michigan medical marijuana act.”

It’s impossible, Abel said, to require dispensing of medical marijuana through pharmacies.

“They don’t have a supply, and no way to get it. There’s just no way for them to do it,” Abel said.

Still, he’s resting easy with the idea that the bills are going nowhere, and are really more about grandstanding for political popularity than they are about the Michigan medical marijuana law.

The committee will take up the bills Jan. 19, 1 p.m., in room 210 in the Farnum building in Lansing.
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Law Blogger Note: The Michigan Medical Marijuana Act is the subject of a post in the electronic criminal lawyer blog.

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