The War on Medical Marijuana in MI Super Thread, NEWS,BUST,LAWS <<<<Updated Often>>>>

  • Thread starter oscar169
  • Start date
  • Tagged users None
oscar169

oscar169

Farming 🌱
Supporter
2,729
263
Michigan State Police defend asset forfeiture laws as ‘critical’ tool, open to reforms

Videos >>>> http://fox17online.com/2015/05/12/m...eiture-laws-as-critical-tool-open-to-reforms/

LANSING, Mich. — Lawmakers on Tuesday debated bills aimed at reforming Michigan’s civil asset forfeiture laws to make it more difficult for police to seize property from individuals suspected of being involved in criminal activity.

It’s an issue showing up in headlines across the country and here in Michigan, where police take money, property and even homes from individuals, in many cases before that person has ever been charged with a crime. Just this week, the story of a 22-year-old from Michigan made national headlines after DEA agents seized $16,000 in cash from him while he was riding on an Amtrak train to Los Angeles. He was not detained or charged with a crime, the Albuquerque Journal reported.

In Michigan, more than $24 million in cash and assets were seized from Michiganders in 2013, according to the most recent asset forfeiture report available from Michigan State Police.

Since 2000, more than $250 million in forfeiture revenue has been collected by Michigan law enforcement agencies.

Tuesday, during a House Judiciary Committee hearing, lawmakers explained why increased transparency and uniformity in reporting of forfeitures by law enforcement is needed.

Rep. Jeff Irwin, D-Ann Arbor, who has been pushing for several years to reform the state’s forfeiture laws, said more uniform reporting would provide a clearer picture of how police are using the law and who they’re using it on.

“If you’ve got folks out there that are medical marijuana patients… there’s no way they should be getting raided and having police come in with masks and guns drawn and taking their assets,” Irwin said.

“But what I hear from the police is ‘we need this tool to take down crack dealers outside the elementary school peddling to kids,’ so which is it?”

Sgt. Amy Dehner, an 11 year veteran and legislative liaison with the Michigan State Police, testified Tuesday before the committee saying the practice is critical in the process to stop drug trafficking.

“As long as that cash and those assets continue to flow, whether they can sell a car, a house, stolen TVs, if they can turn that into cash, they continue to allow that illegal business to flourish,” she said. “Our ability to intercede in that process is critical.

Following the hearing, Dehner told FOX 17 she doesn’t agree with the assessment that individuals who have had their assets seized through forfeiture laws are being treated ‘guilty until proven innocent.’

“I think that’s largely the view of the media and trying cases in the papers,” she said. “To say someone is guilty before they go to court is not something the police engage in.”

Dehner acknowledged defendants in asset forfeiture cases have to prove their innocence, rather than the burden being on the government or the state to prove the individual is guilty. When asked if that seemed to contradict the standard ‘presumption of innocence’ generally followed in the justice system, she said the standards for civil asset forfeitures are different from other standards prosecutors and law enforcement follow.

The package of bills making its way through the legislature in Lansing would also raise the standards for evidence by requiring it be ‘clear and convincing.’ Currently, police agencies only need a ‘preponderance’ of evidence that can prove ‘more probable than not’ that illegal activity is taking place.

In February, Wally Kowalski of Van Buren County told FOX 17 his home had been raided by the Michigan State Police before he had ever been charged with a crime.

Kowalski, who has a Ph.D from Penn State University and a background in engineering and specializes in ultraviolet light technology, had been a medical marijuana card holder for several years. He was growing the drug for medicinal use for himself and several designated patients at a home that’s been in his family for decades when it was raided by the Michigan State Police’s Southwestern Enforcement Team in September 2014.

Nationally, civil asset net forfeitures rose to $4.2 billion in 2012, which was up from $1.7 billion in the preceding year, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.

U.S. Rep. Tim Walberg, R-Michigan, introduced reform legislation of his own earlier this year dubbed the FAIR Act, that would restore the Fifth Amendment’s role in civil forfeiture proceedings.


http://fox17online.com/2015/05/12/m...eiture-laws-as-critical-tool-open-to-reforms/
 
Prime C

Prime C

Defender of Dank
Supporter
4,285
263

http://thecompassionchronicles.com/...timony-mars-debate-on-marijuana-dispensaries/

Ridiculous Testimony Mars Debate on Marijuana Dispensaries
14 May, 2015



For the second week in a row, marijuana misinformation surfaced during testimony in Michigan’s House of Representatives regarding medical marijuana and the people that need it


by Rick Thompson/May 14, 2015

LANSING- House Judiciary Committee chairman Rep. Klint Kesto called off a proposed third week of testimony on a pair of medical marijuana bills that the Michigan legislature has been kicking around for the last three years.

Considering the nature of the testimony heard in that committee over the last two weeks, maybe that’s a good thing.

The two bills represent long-awaited corrections to two snags in the medical marijuana laws in Michigan. One bill, re-introduced this year for the third consecutive legislative session, would authorize marijuana dispensaries; the other would correct a 2013 Appellate Court decision that removed legal protections for registered patients using non-smoked forms of cannabis.

This legislative session’s testimony on HB 4209 and HB 4210 began May 1 and continued on May 7. On the 1st the Committee session began with a 45 minute slideshow from the Michigan State Police (MSP) wherein fuzzy math and candy wrappers were presented as proof that marijuana is out of control and needs to be reigned in.

Special: read more about the April 30 session and 38,000 Joints HERE


“When you see people make claims about the exploitation of marijuana and the marijuana industry, it shows how little they know about cannabis itself,” said Jamie Lowell, Chairman of the Michigan chapter of Americans for Safe Access.

The May 7th session featured testimony from Paul Welday, an Oakland County Republican who serves as the frontman for the MRC, often referred to as ‘the Monopoly Group’. During his testimony Welday “commonly refers to legal caregiver grows as “illicit” and “illegal”,” according to the captions on a video released to social media by MILegalize, a grassroots organization seeking legalization of adult use through an inclusive program that fosters small business.

On the video Welday calls these operations “public hazards” and “public nuisance” grows. Even hardcore MRC backers took issue with the nature of the testimony and the assault on the Michigan Medical Marihuana Act (MMMA).

Jim Powers, speaking on behalf of the MILegalize group, said, “We don’t support the attack on the MMMA or the caregiver system and will oppose any effort to restrict the rights already established under current law.”

To be sure, advocates have done their job. The need to re-legalize non-smoked forms of marijuana for registered patients is clear. Testimony delivered by parents of sick children and ill adults has made the issue real to the Committee members. The pictures of 6-year old Ryan Powers, shown in one photo bloated by steroids and in another healthy and smiling, is an indelible image legislators will remember at voting time.

Supporters of the Provisioning Centers Act delivered testimony of significance, including Detroit City Councilman James Tate. In Detroit they are considering proposals to allow dispensaries, or Provisioning Centers, because of the state’s failure to act, Tate told the Committee on the 7th.

Detroit-Councilman-James-Tate-testifies-in-support-of-HB-4209-and-HB-4210-500x369.jpg
photo caption: Councilman James Tate delivers testimony to the Michigan House of Representatives, May 7, 2015



Instead of taking a third session of testimony on May 14th, Chairman Kesto has set the issue aside while amendments to the current language of the bills are being prepared. Another session will be scheduled “in a few weeks,” said Robin Schneider, Legislative Liaison for the National Patients Rights Association(NPRA), the marijuana community’s lead lobbying organization for the advancement of the two bills.

Powered By DT Author Box

Written by Rick Thompson
Thompson-headshot-square.jpg


Rick Thompson was the Editor in Chief for the entire 2-year run of the Michigan Medical Marijuana Magazine, was the spokesman for the Michigan Association of Compassion Centers and is the current Editor and Lead Blogger for The Compassion Chronicles. Rick has addressed committees in both the House and Senate, has authored over 200 articles on marijuana and is a professional photographer. He can be reached at: [email protected]

www.thecompassionchronicles.com/?attachment_id=5519
 
Bill Murry

Bill Murry

337
93
I see anything that says MRC on it i'm burning, anyone with a petition i'ma treat like PETA does people who wear fur.
 
stonestacker

stonestacker

4,271
263
http://www.onmedicalinvalid.com/michigan-case-law-2/

Michigan Case Law



Below are the federal, appellate and Attorney General Opinions regarding the Michigan Medical Marihuana Act, MCL 333.26421 et seq. You may click on the case name for a detailed summary of the case and a link to the formal opinion.

Affirmative Defense

Driving Under the Influence

  • People v Feezel (11-carboxy-THC is not a controlled substance for the per seimpaired analysis)
  • People v Malik (MMA did not alter schedule 1 classification of marijuana for per se impaired analysis)
  • People v Koon (Objective impairment required to show violation of MMA)
Confidentiality Provisions

Enclosed, Locked Facility

  • People v King (definition of enclosed, locked facility)
  • People v Bylsma (may not possess unconnected patients’ plants; enclosed locked facility only to permit one person, the patient or the caregiver)
  • People v Keller (definition of enclosed, locked facility not unconstitutionally vague)
Employment Law

Evidentiary Issues

Federal Preemption
  • Attorney General Opinion #7262 (police may not return of marijuana after arrest due to federal law)
  • Ter Beck v City of Wyoming (MMA not preempted by Controlled Substances Act)
Probable Cause

  • People v Brown (affidavit not required to show marijuana activities exceeded MMA limits)
Retroactive Application
Sale of Marijuana
  • People v McQueen (MMA does not protect the transfer of marihuana from one-patient to another)
  • People v McDonald (MMA does not permit the “sale” sale of marijuana from one patient to another)
Section 4 Immunity

  • People v Carruthers (possession of “marijuana” that is not “useable marihuana” removes Section 4 immunity)
  • People v Hinzman (no Section 4 immunity if possess more than 12 marijuana plants)
  • People v McQueen (MMA does not protect the transfer of marihuana from one-patient to another)
  • People v Nicholson (patients may assert Section 4 immunity at arrest, prosecution or penalty stages of criminal process; to have possession of registry identification card, it must be “reasonably accessible”)
  • People v Pointer (must satisfy useable marijuana and marijuana plant limitation to enjoy Section 4 protections)
  • People v Hartwick (evidence needed to prove Section 4 elements)
Zoning and Land Use
  • Ter Beck v City of Wyoming (local ordinance preempted by MMA; MMA not preempted by federal law)state preemption of local zoning ordinance )
          1. 21/10: People v Peters -PDF
          2. 6/8/10: People v Feezel -PDF
          3. 8/10/10: People v Malik -PDF
          4. 8/26/10: People v Campbell -PDF
          5. 8/31/10: AG Opinion #7250 –Link
          6. 9/14/10: People v Redden -PDF; ConcurringPDF
          7. 7/10/10: US v Hicks –Google Scholar(federal court)
          8. 1/11/11: People v Kolanek -PDF
          9. 2/3/11: People v King -PDF
          10. 2/10/11: People v Walburg -PDF
          11. 2/11/11: Casias v Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. -PDF(federal court)
Like Oscar said they don't work.
 
Prime C

Prime C

Defender of Dank
Supporter
4,285
263
http://www.mlive.com/news/flint/index.ssf/2015/05/flint_marijuana_dispensaries_g.html


Flint marijuana dispensaries get back in business after crackdown

FLINT, MI -- The city has given three dispensaries the green light to fill orders from medical marijuana patients, the first businesses approved to return to the marketplace since a crackdown late last month.

Flint Director of Planning Megan Hunter said Friday, May 15, that three businesses -- Green Bean West, 1625 W. Atherton Road; Sweet Leaf, 400 S. Dort Highway; and Green Culture, 808 S. Center Road -- were cleared to open this week.

Representatives of the three dispensaries announced the achievement in a news release and scheduled a news conference.

Although 14 marijuana dispensaries have been through the city's site plan review process, all were ordered to shut down by the city late last month after officials claimed they had problems ranging from overdue taxes to building and fire code violations.

"This is a (day for) celebrating the end of a long process," said Rick Thompson, a member of the Michigan chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws. "The main thing is, the city is to be congratulated for doing this.

"The industry is willing to leap through these hoops as long as we know" what they are, Thompson said.

Just four weeks ago, Flint Police Chief James Tolbert said the city was drawing a line in the sand with dispensaries, some of which also cultivate marijuana, because many appeared to be operating in violation of regulations.

Hunter said many of the problems were related to modifications made in the buildings that house the businesses without approvals from the city as well as past-due debts to the city.

"Everyone is in a little bit of a different place" with licensing, Hunter said. "Some folks didn't complete (the process) after site plan review. Most of the issues have been with the buildings. You need to get right with the building code."

Four businesses are actively working with Flint building officials to gain their licenses, Hunter said.

"I think people have been used to the city not really doing enforcement," she said. "We reiterated a number of times, but I think people just thought they could operate with impunity."

Police and building officials took a fresh look at dispensaries after adoption of a new marijuana ordinance in Flint in 2014, ending a three-year moratorium on the businesses.

Although eight dispensaries were grandfathered and continued to operate, the city required the businesses to come into compliance with the new regulations.

The new ordinance mandates that dispensaries be more than 1,000 feet from any church, park, school or other dispensary. It also sets aside only a few small sections of the city in which the businesses can operate.
 
yooper420

yooper420

Curmudgeonlander
Supporter
3,726
263
Do not trust the city of Flint, first chance they get they will screw you. I retired from the city of Flint 15 years ago. All they have done is try to gut my pension and make me pay more out of my pocket. Worked for the city of Flint for 28 years, retire and then have to fight to keep my pension intact. I put my life on the line for 28 years as a firefighter, retire and now have to fight to keep what the city promised, thru contracts to provide. I kept my part of the bargain, why can`t the city ?
 
LittleDabbie

LittleDabbie

Supporter
11,813
438
From what i heard ALL the pot shops in Gaylord were raided the other day..

Otsego County medical marijuana dispensaries busted


GAYLORD — Straits Area Narcotics Enforcement (SANE) and others raided several medical marijuana dispensaries Wednesday, taking extensive amounts of plants and other items.

SANE, along with Michigan State Police Troopers and other police officers and drug enforcement agencies searched several medical marijuana dispensaries in Gaylord after receiving information they were operating illegally.

In total, eight dispensaries were searched in Otsego County. Eight homes inside and outside of the county, owned by the dispensary owners, were searched as well.

Detective Lt. Ken Mills, SANE unit commander, said his team had been working on obtaining search warrants for the past few weeks to allow the units to search these locations for evidence of violations.

“We had received information that the dispensaries, or at least some, were operating illegally,” he said. “They were not following medical marijuana laws and we were in position to initiate investigations.”

After taking an initial look at their findings, Mills said it is clear these dispensaries were in violation of Michigan medical marijuana laws.

Mills did not immediately have exact numbers, but he said at least 100 marijuana plants were recovered, as well as edibles, processed marijuana, documents, vehicles and weapons.

According to Mills, some of the common violations found dealt with providing medical marijuana to more than the legal five patients per caregiver, having more marijuana plants on-hand than what is legal and dispensaries obtaining medical marijuana through illegal transactions.

According to Mills, each caregiver is allowed to have five patients and 12 plants per patient, as well as 12 for themselves, totaling 72 plants per caregiver. In addition, caregivers may only possess 2.5 ounces of marijuana per patient and 2.5 ounces for themselves. Some dispensaries were found in violation of these laws, he said.

According to Sgt. Jeff Gorno from the Michigan State Police Gaylord Post, among the dispensaries searched was Compassionate Caregivers, 2301 S. Otsego Ave., and All Well Natural Health, 845 S. Otsego Ave., in addition to several others in the post's coverage area of Emmet, Charlevoix, Antrim, Cheboygan and Otsego counties.

When the troopers and other law enforcement came to the properties, they confiscated various items. Mills said, to his knowledge, none were forced to close, and the owners were told what they were doing wrong.

“It's up to the people operating,” Mills said. “We didn't advise anybody to close.”

As of Friday, no arrests had been made, though Mills said his team will complete an extensive amount of paperwork and submit it to Otsego Prosecutor Michael Rola, and arrests are expected to be made.

Mills said the multi-county operation began early Wednesday morning by searching the homes first, starting outside of Otsego County and making their way in.

“We knew once we started in Gaylord, people would see us and the media and everything would get involved,” he said. “People quickly found out.”

All of the evidence has since been numbered, packaged and sent to different labs. Mills said all that remains is mostly paperwork.

Several issues related to medical marijuana over the past several months led to these searches, including the discovery that people were obtaining marijuana from other people who had been prescribed it at the dispensaries.

Mills said more information, including amounts of marijuana plants, processed marijuana, items confiscated and possible legal actions will be available in the near future.

Assisting SANE in this effort were Traverse Narcotics Team, Upper Peninsula Substance Enforcement Team, Huron Undercover Narcotics Team, troopers from several Michigan State Police posts and deputies from several county sheriff's departments.

http://www.petoskeynews.com/gaylord...cle_5f8c542c-cde7-50ce-a740-ddd8aadb0e9f.html

 
Bill Murry

Bill Murry

337
93
HMMMM........... lets see the MMA does not make dispensaries legally in any way or offer any protection to centers that provide safe transfer points. If the stupid ass cops read their own shit they'd notice that caregiver to caregiver exchanges are the only permitted transfer of Meds outside your own 5 patients. What a fucking Joke If you know me you know i've been through Hell and Back to Provide Meds in the Greater Flint area with a Permit from the City that offers no protection from prosecution should the staties come knocking. All this shit is Lansings fault and the fucking idiots the state elects every year.

"We had received information that the dispensaries, or at least some, were operating illegally,” he said. “They were not following medical marijuana laws and we were in position to initiate investigations.”
 
oscar169

oscar169

Farming 🌱
Supporter
2,729
263
It is shit but I'm glad that Flint was willing to at least issue permits, My County has shut them all down and da will go to hell and back to prosecute anyone with ties to them, so you guys are the lucky few that still can operate and make a buck were just fucked
 
LittleDabbie

LittleDabbie

Supporter
11,813
438
Michigan Cops Legally 'Rob' Medical Marijuana Patient Of 'Every Belonging' -- Even Her Vibrator



Medical marijuana user Ginnifer Hency told a group of Michigan lawmakers last week that a drug task force raided her home and kept 'every belonging' she owned -- including her vibrator -- even after a judge dismissed the charges against her.

Forbes contributor Jacob Sullum reported last week that Hency testified before the Michigan state House Judiciary Committee about what happened when her home in Smiths Creek was raided last July.

Hency explained that her neurologist had recommended medical marijuana to treat pain associated with multiple sclerosis. She is also registered in the state of Michigan as a caregiver for five other patients, giving her the ability to distribute medical marijuana.

Hency said that the six ounces in her locked backpack were in compliance with Michigan medical marijuana laws when a drug task force raided her home with four children present.

"They took everything, even though I was fully compliant with the Michigan medical marijuana laws," she said. "They charged me with possession with intent to deliver, even though I'm allowed to posses and deliver."

A St. Clair County judge dropped the charges against Hency, but for 10 months law enforcement officials have refused to give back her belongings.

"They have had my stuff for 10 months, my ladder, my iPad, my children's iPads, my children's phones, my medicine for my patients," Hency noted. "Why a ladder? Why my vibrator, I don't know either. Why TVs?"

“The prosecutor came out to me and said, ‘Well, I can still beat you in civil court. I can still take your stuff.’” Hency recalled, adding, “I was at a loss. I literally just sat there dumbfounded.”

"And I was just sitting there, like, thinking I was going to be able to get my stuff back, but not in this country. And that is why civil asset forfeiture in this state needs to change."

According to Sullum, the Michigan House Judiciary Committee is considering a bill that would require local law enforcement agencies to report forfeitures to the state police, and it would raise the standard of proof required for civil forfeiture in drug cases.

But under the proposed law, local agencies would continue to keep 100 percent of the proceeds from forfeitures, "which gives them a strong incentive to target people based on the assets they own instead of the threat they pose to public safety," Sullum wrote.

http://crooksandliars.com/2015/05/michigan-cops-legally-rob-medical
 
C

CannabisGal

30
18
http://www.freep.com/story/news/loc...h-facing-aggravated-assault-charges/27112461/

635668623485936948-Virgil-Smith.jpg

State Sen. Virgil K. Smith, suspected of firing numerous shots at his ex-wife's car early Sunday, told investigators it was the stupidest thing he had done in his life, according to police.

The incident occurred after the Detroit Democrat's ex-wife pushed her way into the house and attempted to attack another woman who was in Smith's bed, according to police. Smith told police she threw a chair at the windows of his house and he shot at her car.

The criminal case against Smith, who was arrested and is being held at the Detroit Detention Center, was sent back to Detroit police for additional investigation, the Wayne County Prosecutor's Office said today Monday.

Detroit Police Chief James Craig said Smith was arrested on suspicion of aggravated assault with a gun and malicious destruction of property following the incident outside of his east side Detroit home at about 1 a.m. Sunday.


DETROIT FREE PRESS

Editorial: Time-out for Sen. Virgil Smith


According to the police sources, the shots were fired at a Mercedes-Benz belonging to Smith's ex-wife, who was not injured. She has not been named by police.

Smith told police the woman came to the house in the 18600 block of Wexford and was banging on his bedroom window. When Smith opened the door, she kicked it, pushed past him and went to the bedroom, saw another woman in his bed and attempted to attack her, according to police.

Smith told police he grabbed the woman and they fell backward, knocking over a television. He told her to leave his house and he went to the bedroom to check on the other woman, according to police.

When he went to the front door, according to police, Smith saw the woman throwing a chair at his house windows.

Then, he told police, he shot the woman's vehicle.

Craig said todayMonday that 10 shots hit the car.

Officers executed a search warrant on Smith's home, where they recovered a rifle, a .22-caliber rifle cleaning kit, three magazines with live rounds and one empty one, according to police.

Smith remained in police custody Monday evening, said June West, a spokeswoman for the Detroit Police Department. The Free Press left messages for Smith's attorney, Godfrey Dillard, but he could not be reached for comment.

West declined to provide additional details about the case.

"I can't comment on any of the specifics," West said.

Craig previously said: "We have not treated this case any differently than others that involve domestic violence."

Smith, a Democrat, represents Senate District 4, which includes portions of Detroit, Allen Park, Lincoln Park and Southgate

Democrats today expressed both concern and outrage over the allegations against Smith.

"We are deeply troubled by these allegations. As details of the situation become clearer, we will take appropriate action," said Angela Wittrock, spokeswoman for Senate Minority Leader Jim Ananich, D-Flint.

The liberal activist group Progress Michigan went a step further, calling for Smith's resignation.

"If these allegations against the Senator are true, he should resign immediately," said Lonnie Scott, executive director of Progress Michigan. "The right to due process is an important value shared by progressives and while the Senator is innocent until proven guilty, these extremely troubling allegations and legal proceedings will make it difficult at best for him to represent his constituents."

Smith, a graduate of Michigan State and Western Michigan universities, was first elected to the state House of Representatives in 2002. He was elected to the Senate in 2010. His father, Virgil Smith Jr., is presiding judge in Wayne County Family Juvenile Court and served more than 20 years in the Legislature.

Smith is a key ally for Mayor Mike Duggan in his proposed plan to get cheaper insurance rates for Detroiters. When the mayor announced the plan on April 30, Smith promised to introduce what he called the D-Insurance bill, and he said he was confident he'd be able to win approval in both chambers of the Legislature.

Duggan declined to discuss the matter today at a news conference in southwest Detroit where he and Gov. Rick Snyder announced the creation of hundreds of jobs in manufacturing and training at the former Southwestern High School. The mayor said that in his previous role as a Wayne County prosecutor he didn't appreciate public officials commenting on cases before charging decisions were made, and he would afford current Prosecutor Kym Worthy the same respect.

Nor did Duggan respond to a question about whether the arrest of the senator would impact Duggan's efforts to win the Legislature's approval of D-Insurance, the mayor's initiative to lower auto insurance rates for Detroiters by allowing them to opt out of unlimited personal injury benefits in exchange for what Duggan said could be a $1,000 break off the average $3,400 annual insurance premium for city drivers.

Gov. Rick Snyder also declined to discuss the incident, saying, "That's in the criminal justice system, and that will go through the normal due-process."

Smith has backed the mayor's proposal, while several members of the delegation of state lawmakers representing Detroit have been critical of it, questioning whether it amounts to second-class insurance for Detroiters who pay some of the highest insurance rates in the nation.

Former Attorney General Mike Cox said Monday that the crimes Smith is accused of don't fit with that ballot proposal approved by voters in 2010 that prohibits people from holding state elective office if they were convicted of a felony that involved "dishonesty, deceit, fraud or a breach of the public trust."

"That wouldn't have anything to do with him holding public office," Cox said. "Traditionally, it's misconduct in public office or embezzlement or something like that."

Michigan senators do have the ability to expel a fellow member from the Senate, but it's been done only once, when Macomb County Republican Sen. David Jaye was expelled from office after being arrested on a domestic violence complaint and convicted of three drunken-driving offenses. A Senate panel held a hearing on Jaye's expulsion in 2001, recommended that he be expelled and the full Senate agreed.

"This is a matter for the police to deal with at this point," said Amber McCann, spokeswoman for Senate Majority Leader Arlan Meekhof, R-West Olive. "If the Senate needs to take action, that will be a discussion for a later time."

This isn't Smith's first run-in with law enforcement, He was convicted twice in 2004 of drinking and driving — first in February of operating a vehicle while impaired by liquor in Lansing and in August of operating while intoxicated offense in Chelsea. His license was revoked because he had two or more drunken-driving convictions within seven years, according to the Michigan Department of State.

Smith appealed his revocation in 2007 and was issued a restricted license; in December 2008 he regained full driving privileges and has had a few minor traffic violations since then. He now has zero points on his driving record, according to the state.

Prior to that, while in college, Smith was arrested twice in two shoplifting-related cases. In February 2002, when Smith was in his early 20s, he dropped a philosophy book down his pants at the Student Book Store in East Lansing, according to police records. He was caught while leaving the store and handed the book back but gave police a false name and birth date, according to the report. He was arrested on disorderly conduct and presenting a false identification, later sentenced to a $250 fine and probation.

Before that incident, he'd been arrested in July 2001 while trying to flee a Meijer store in Okemos with a bottle of tequila, hiding the bottle in his sweatpants. He pleaded guilty in that case to retail fraud, according to previous reports.



LOCK HIM up an throw away the key. Enough with politicians that can do what they want without any consequences......LOCK HIM UP FOR GOOD!!!!

YOU know if it was a commoner WE would be serving BIG time!!!
 
oscar169

oscar169

Farming 🌱
Supporter
2,729
263
@GreenThumbBill @rascali , Lets get back on track with this thread, I don't need this type of Bullshit in this Super Thread...:mad:
 
oscar169

oscar169

Farming 🌱
Supporter
2,729
263
Marijuana oil gives family hope
B9317566614Z.1_20150602154916_000_GKOAVBNDP.1-0.jpg

Chris and Tani Wiltse have reason for optimism for their developmentally disabled son Corey now that it’s legal to ship medical marijuana oil, which should control his seizures.

The Wiltses have long sought to use what is considered by many families in a similar situation as the gold standard of marijuana oil, grown and produced by five brothers in Colorado Springs, Colo.

They formed an organization called Realm of Caring. The strain of marijuana they grow is high in cannabidiol, or CBD, the ingredient shown to control seizures. More importantly, it was low in THC, the ingredient that provides the marijuana buzz.

Shipment of the oil is against the law, so the family had to find other, less-effective sources. They grew so frustrated last year that the couple considered having Tani and Corey move to Colorado, where the oil is sold legally with a medical marijuana card.

Earlier this year, Chris worked with a Michigan marijuana grower to provide the oil. He knew it was illegal but he also knew he needed to do what was best for his child.

But those days of frantic uncertainty may be ending thanks to what Wiltse saw as something akin to a bolt from the blue.

“We got an email from Realm of Caring a few weeks ago that mentioned it was OK to ship it now,” Wiltse said. “There’s such a low THC level that it’s classified as hemp oil, not marijuana.”

The result? Wiltse ordered a 100-milliliter bottle for $300 and sprays two milliliters or so on his son’s food. Two more bottles are on the way and Wiltse hopes to provide Corey, who graduates today from Doris Klaussen Developmental Center, with what he needs.

They know there are no guarantees he will improve, but to be provided the opportunity is all they sought.

“Hopefully it’s a life-changer,” Wiltse said. “We’re very optimistic. We’d just like to reduce the seizures and reduce the pharmaceuticals. Three hundred dollars a month to save my kid is not a problem.”

Wiltse said Corey’s rate of seizures had declined for most of the year until May, when they increased to 63.

And the family knows any improvements might not be seen for at least four months. But, finally, they have the product they’ve already wanted.

“We’re cautiously optimistic,” he said.

He’s also optimistic that the mood in state legislatures around the country is changing toward the legality and sale of marijuana oil.

Michigan lawmakers have been wrestling with the issue for several years. Two bills last year that would have helped the Wiltses died before passage. One would have allowed marijuana dispensaries in the state to dispense CBD oil and the other would have allowed the growing of marijuana plants high in CBD to be grown and processed in the state.

But state Rep. Michael Callton, R-Nashville, has rewritten and reintroduced a bill that would ease constraints on medical marijuana oil.

“We’ve watched this movement grow,” said Nick Wake, legislative director for Callton. “In the 2011-12 session, it was like pulling teeth finding co-sponsors for the bill. In the 2013-14 session we got a lot of co-sponsors and we have even more this time. People are seeing this, as it becomes more mainstream, you’re seeing a shift. They see a need for a well-regulated system.”

Wake said momentum for some type of legalization is building and medical marijuana is now legal in 15 states. Virginia and Oklahoma are the latest to approve such legislation.

“It represents an evolution,” he said. “Every iteration of the bill gets a little better. It’s a big lift. This used to be an illicit substance and now kids are having their seizures controlled and cancer patients dealing with pain. That’s amazing.”

http://www.battlecreekenquirer.com/.../02/marijuana-oil-gives-family-hope/28366885/
 

Latest posts

Top Bottom