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Colo. Judge: Pot Shops Have Constitutional Rights

vta

Active member
Veteran
Colo. Judge: Pot Shops Have Constitutional Rights

By Kristen Wyatt, Associated Press Writer
Source: Associated Press

medical Centennial, Colo. -- Medical marijuana patients have a constitutional right to buy pot, not just use it, according to ruling Wednesday by a judge. Arapahoe County District Court Judge Christopher Cross sided with the CannaMart dispensary, which sued the city of Centennial after it was shut down in October.

Cross granted the dispensary's request for an injunction, which will prevent the city from keeping the dispensary closed while CannaMart challenges the city's argument that it can ban pot shops because they violated federal drug laws.

Colorado in 2000 passed a constitutional amendment allowing medical marijuana, which is now allowed in 14 states. Recent decisions by state health authorities, along with a signal this year from the U.S. attorney general that federal prosecutors won't interfere with state pot rules, have led to an explosion of commercial marijuana stores across Colorado.

In the oral ruling, the judge had sharp words for cities that say federal drug laws allow them to keep out any dispensaries. Cross said the city violated the rights of three medical marijuana patients who joined the lawsuit.

"These are people who have a right to medical marijuana, the right to the caregiver of their choice. That has been taken away from them," Cross said.

CannaMart's owner, Stan Zislis, said after the decision that he wasn't sure if he would reopen the shop in Centennial. Zislis has opened a new CannaMart in the nearby suburb of Littleton.

The judge's decision left unresolved a zoning dispute between Centennial and CannaMart, which had about 600 clients at the time it was closed. The city also has passed a moratorium on new dispensaries, so CannaMart cannot move and reopen elsewhere in Centennial.

Lauren Davis, a lawyer for CannaMart, said the judge's words "should be a warning to towns across this state" that are considering whether to ban dispensaries. Another town south of Denver, Castle Rock, has also cited federal drug laws in forcing a dispensary there to stop selling marijuana.

"They are violating the rights of sick patients and caregivers," Davis said.

One of the patients who sued, Eric Mosher, said CannaMart's closure made it difficult for him to obtain medical marijuana recommended for a debilitating nerve ailment.

"It's hard enough to be in the situation I'm in," Mosher said after the ruling.

Centennial's lawyer, Robert Widner, said it was too soon to say how city officials would proceed.

The judge scheduled further legal discussion in the case for next year. He concluded by saying that cities wanting to get rid of all dispensaries could find themselves violating constitutional rights.

Even though federal laws ban the sale of marijuana, Cross said, "The voters have spoken. It is not a criminal act in the state of Colorado."
 
K

Kola Radical

Ripping the head off the status quo and shitting down the neck hole.

Im proud to be a coloradoean.. coloradeon... color... Im glad I live here.
 
H

hulkbogan

It's bs.. He supplies compassion clubs with bud
, edibles, creams, and reprocessed hash made with
oil and kief. I have the cannabis culture article about
his op infront of me. He dosent ingest 60gs a day he
sells it to compassion clubs to pay for his op and profit.

I am ok with what he's doing up to a point..
Monopolizing medical marijuana Is just to much tho.
You guys should check out the article it's neat, has his
feeding schedule and other great stuff.
 

Pythagllio

Patient Grower
Veteran
WTH are you talking about hulkbogan? The 60g a day guy is in Canada, this thread is about CO dispensaries being protected in CO.

Why in the world do so many have a problem with people making money for providing services? My wife broke her ankle yesterday. She's going to need surgery. She's going to be in the hands of professionals, and I wouldn't want it any other way. Among other things, being professional means they get paid to do their jobs. Why would you want to depend on the kindness of strangers for your medicine? Instead of excoriating those trying to provide a professional service to patient, why aren't you turning your distaste against the gov't, which should be subsidizing the medicine that is needed by the indigent, or in the case of Canada the single payer should be fucking paying. Canadian gov't pays for everybody else's medicine, right? I don't hear anyone complaining that the pharmacist that fills opiod prescriptions is paid a salary, or the doctor, or the nurse, but goddamn, if a grower wants to earn a living he's some kind of dastard. That's nothing but bullshit.
 

photi

New member
Why in the world do so many have a problem with people making money for providing services? .......I don't hear anyone complaining that the pharmacist that fills opiod prescriptions is paid a salary, or the doctor, or the nurse, but goddamn, if a grower wants to earn a living he's some kind of dastard. That's nothing but bullshit.

well said. there are too many people living in La La land.

"what a scoundrel, he doesn't give a way his weed. pig!!"
 

Pythagllio

Patient Grower
Veteran
It really is the misdirected anger that gets me. The anger should be directed at those charged with providing medicine, whether for the indigent (US currently) or everyone (Canada and other single payers). The exclusion of cannabis as medicine under these schemes is discriminatory and without merit medically. It's particularly bothersome to me to observe this behavior from Canada considering the US has a tradition of letting the poor suffer and die. I expect the US Gov't to enact inhumane policies, and the opposite from Canada.

One of the things that pleases me most about DC's I-59 is the provision that says:

Sec. 9 (a) The Director of the Department of Health of the District of Columbia must develop a plan, and submit it, within 90 days of the approval of this act, to the Council of the District of Columbia to provide for the safe and affordable distribution of marijuana to all patients enrolled in Medicaid or a Ryan White CARE Act funded program who are in medical need, who desire to add marijuana to their health care regimen and whose licensed physician reasonably believes that marijuana would be beneficial to their patient.

Many here may have jumped to the erroneous conclusion that I'm a 'profiteer' because I defend the existence of said profiteers. All I want is as far as money is concerned is a reasonable, professional salary and benefits comparable to the cost of living. Frankly, I would be tickled pink to land a contract with the DC Gov't to provide free cannabis to the indigent sick at the DC gov'ts expense. I'll take the average salary + standard benefits of a gov't drone in the immediate area for doing so. In DC that's just under 100k. Give me that on a W-2 and a whole lot of poor people will get their medicine. If I don't get that salary though I have to work another job. Am I really being 'selfish' if I acknowledge that I have a responsibility to my family and my creditors? How am I supposed to work full time providing cannabis for free if I have to work full time to provide for myself and my family? Regardless, even the profiteers serve their purpose. Seeing people make mad stacks of benjamins draws others who want the same, and competition lowers prices. We're are finally seeing this in CA, as the market is flooded with medicine. The 'profiteers' make it easier for the saints like the Corrals to do their job by taking care of the marginal patients who would otherwise suck resources from WAMM, mostly indirectly. I'm just not sure what people would think would happen if you were able to wave a magic wand and make it impossible for the profiteers to make a profit. Do these people have the fantasy that the people that are in it for the money would suddenly decide that money wasn't the most important thing? Do they think people inclined to help the indigent are thinking 'well they've got access to high priced meds at the for profit dispensary, so I'll skip doing any charity work'? Horse crap, every single person with that inclination is already doing what they can. The thing that stands between the poor and affordable medication is the gov't and the law. Give me the ability to securely raise medicine in a couple of acres of greenhouse and I'll give you $50-75 per ounce medical grade cannabis. If I do that today anywhere in the US I'd likely end up serving a sentence of life with no parole in a Federal prison. Reality is that to avoid that risk I have to limit my production to 99 plants or less. The two things that will result in the access of reasonably priced medicine is the ability to institute economies of scale in production, and the proper gov't subsidization of medicine for the poor. Excoriating the 'profiteers' accomplishes nothing, does not provide indigent patient #1 with even a gram of cannabis, and never will.
 
Good news about the ruling. Short of re-criminalizing the local governments will find they have no legal way to stop the momentum of medicinal cannabis.

Sorry to hear about your wife´s ankle, Pythagllio. Edibles and skin creams will go a long way towards helping relieve the pain of the bone stitching back together and during rehab therapy. Good luck.
 
What about our Constitutional Rights to the Freedom of Religon and the Pursuit of Happiness?

If you pay a Judge with enough "Medical Marijuana" Money, they will agree with you. Awesome.
 
What about our Constitutional Rights to the Freedom of Religon and the Pursuit of Happiness?

If you pay a Judge with enough "Medical Marijuana" Money, they will agree with you. Awesome.

Wow very pessimistic, why so? IMO you should be happy, that is one more stepping stone to legalization. Isn't that a big part of what this site is about and why Gypsy has done the things he has over the years.
 
K

Kola Radical

Recent polls show over 70% of the ppl favor legalization. People pretty much know it's a safe alternative to alcohol and hard drugs.

More than half the judges in Co, probably go to work baked. I know I would...
 
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