Michigan Panel Votes 4-2 In Support Of Cannabis Use For Children With Autism, LARA Director Denies Petition

Michigan Panel Votes 4-2 In Support Of Cannabis Use For Children With Autism, LARA Director Denies Petition

Michigan Panel Votes 4-2 In Support Of Cannabis Use For Children With Autism, LARA Director Denies Petition.

 

 

Mike Zimmer, the Director of LARA in Michigan, has taken the futures of children and their families into his hands, only to crush them, insult them, and put all of their lives in danger. I was in attendance on July 31st 2015 at the last autism hearing in Lansing when the panel was finally given the chance to make an informed vote of 4-2 in favor of Autism being added to the list of qualifying conditions for medical marijuana.

I held our 4-year-old son Emery affectionately in my arms as I spoke in front of the panel of our experience over the last year and how it has changed us. We are able to give Emery cannabis because of his epilepsy diagnosis. I explained what it has done to reverse his autism impairment, to help him grow and to be happy, and for us to be able to live together in the same home. Before cannabis, we were going to have to live in separate homes on the same farmland together. Emery could not help but attack everyone around him constantly, including his younger siblings. Now, we happily spend entire days together and can hardly imagine the road we were headed down before Emery’s brain was allowed to work the way it is meant to because of cannabis.
 
We were at the hearing with other friends as well. These friends have been fighting this for over two years. They are parents, family, friends, attorneys, doctors, experts, and other activists. Parents with adult autistic children spoke to the panel as well. These parents have spent decades watching their children suffer as they refill endless bottles of dangerous pharmaceutical medications. They explained that from all of their research and everything they have seen, they believe that cannabis will work. They want to try it.
 
Parents like Dwight Zahringer have seen that other children using cannabis are not only experiencing changes in behavior and sleep patterns, but are also becoming verbal for the first time. Like every parent, these are things that he wants deeply for his own son, who is mostly non-verbal at the age of three. The original petitioner Lisa Smith’s son Noah, who has been non-verbal his whole life, has just recently started talking at the age of six because of cannabis. Parents caring for children with an autism diagnosis shouldn’t have to wait another day to try a proven safe and effective medicine that is non-toxic and has never caused a death. This is especially true when it’s helping so many people already.
 
Mike Zimmer denied the petition despite the panel’s recommendation to add it to the qualifying list of conditions.
 
The panel is specifically designated by LARA to make the decisions regarding new conditions that should qualify for protection under the MMMA. They reviewed over seventy-five peer-reviewed articles with over eight hundred pages of scientific information relating to the paediatric use of cannabis for autism. Parents should be able to choose this medicine for their autistic children. Adults who are suffering should be able to qualify as well. But instead of passing this decision through so that families can finally find relief, healing, and new positive experiences, Mike Zimmer denied it. From the decision:
 
“This lack of scientific evidence is concerning … the petition fails to acknowledge the direct impact on children… .”
 
And Lt. Governor Brian Calley, who has an autistic child of his own, weighed in by saying “there are neither sufficient studies nor scientific trials demonstrating its clinical impact to justify approval at this time.”
Maybe what these guys need is over eight hundred pages of information on the dangers of using anti-psychotics, anti-depressants, anti-insomnia, and anti-anxiety medications on children just to help them cope or to control dangerous behaviors.
 
Zimmer writes that children with autism “without associated seizure disorders” are already eligible under the language of the MMMA. He implies that if there are no seizures, then the autism is not severe, with no clear definition for what severe autism is.
 
Let’s help him with that: autism is a word with six letters. That’s it. But children with an autism diagnosis, whether it is considered severe or not, have to see doctors to get that diagnosis. And there are reasons for seeing the doctors. Parents can’t just walk into a dispensary and get an autism diagnosis and a medical card. Children with these conditions have a neurologist and sometimes many other doctors that they see regularly to monitor their growth, behaviors, and intelligence. It feels like what Mike Zimmer is really saying is that he doesn’t trust the many compassionate doctors, attorneys, parents, experts, social workers and other professionals who work in this field. These are the people who spend time with autistic children and their families.
 
They support this petition. Yet, he feels he has the right to make this decision for all of us.
 
He does not have that right.
 
He does not have the right to put a time limit on the lives of people or to force parents to separate siblings from each other when they can grow up together as friends, happily and peacefully. He doesn’t have the right to choose the number of children that are allowed to thrive and succeed in this world. In his Final Determination letter, he even makes it a point to rebut the claims that adding autism would cause a minimal increase in participation among minors.
 
276608146-Lara-Final-Determination-Medical-Marijuana-Autism
 
Attorney Michael Komorn suggests:
 
This guy is the head of LARA, the agency that licenses these physicians, and he relies upon the argument that the doctors that we license can’t be trusted and will abuse the system. To follow his logic, his licensed physicians will treat autistic patients who they are not qualified to treat … The solution is that he can regulate this through the physicians and lay down rules and regulations. Instead he shuts it down.
None of this matters, of course. Every child with an autism diagnosis will benefit from using cannabis. This is clearly outlined in all of the peer-reviewed information that was included with the petition even aside from the hundreds, if not thousands, of miraculous stories from all across the country. These are stories of autism impairment being reversed, sometimes seemingly overnight, just from using low doses of cannabis oil or other forms of cannabis. Let’s make sure these people have all the information they need to make this right for us!
 
THIS IS A CALL FOR ACTION!
 
California and D.C parents can already treat their children with cannabis for autism. This fight has been going on in Michigan for long enough now that a lot of people far and away are paying attention. When autism is added to the list of qualifying conditions in Michigan, our children will literally become the long-term studies that Mike Zimmer and other opponents of the petition claim that we need to have first.
 
Please take a few minutes out of your day and call LARA and the Governor’s office, or send out some emails or faxes. It really does mean a lot to everyone who works hard on this. It could make a huge difference in the outcome and aftermath of Zimmer’s final determination letter, which is included in the article. If you have any creative ideas or information that you feel could help, please tell us about it. Some websites that you can contact are listed below. If you have a success story you want to share, feel free to share in the comments below as well. This might be a game to these politicians and profiteers, but these are our lives! We deserve to create them ourselves!
 
 
Here is the contact information for Mike Zimmer, Brian Calley, and the Governor’s Office. Please help these guys understand!
Brian Calley
https://www.facebook.com/briancalley
 
(Governor’s Office)
PHONE: (517) 373-3400
PHONE: (517) 335-7858 – Constituent Services
FAX:(517) 335-6863
 
Mike Zimmer
Phone: (517) 373-3286
Email: zimmerm@michigan.gov
Licensing and Regulatory Affairs
P.O. Box 30004
Lansing, MI 48909
Phone: (517) 373-1820
Fax: (517) 373-2129
 
This is a link to “The Endocannabinoid System as it Relates to Autism” – Joe Stone; Christian Bogner, M.D. Its references list the peer-reviewed scientific articles relating to cannabis in the treatment of autism that were included in the petition to add autism to the list of qualifying conditions to use cannabis in Michigan:

 

The Endocannabinoid System as it Relates to Autism


 
 

http://www.collective-evolution.com/2015/10/06/michigan-panel-votes-4-2-in-support-of-cannabis-use-for-children-with-autism-lara-director-denies-petition/

It’s Official: Marijuana Is Medicine

It’s Official: Marijuana Is Medicine

July 01, 2015

A series of papers in the Journal of the American Medical Association is starting to correct the shameful legacy of drug war politics over cannabis science. But a research catch-22 persists.

The nation’s top medical organization released a major series of papers on medical cannabis last week in the Journal of the American Medical Association, in a move that constitutes a small step for the AMA, but a giant leap in cannabis medical history.

In five key papers, teams of researchers systematically reviewed dozens of clinical studies of marijuana, speaking in clear language that the “use of marijuana for chronic pain, neuropathic pain, and spasticity due to multiple sclerosis is supported by high-quality evidence.”

The review validated what doctors and patients in California have risked their freedom to say for twenty years. The findings also directly refute critics who maintain that “marijuana is not medicine.”

“They concluded cannabis is useful,” said Dr. Frank Lucido, a Berkeley physician who specializes in cannabis. “I don’t think a single study didn’t show benefit. … I think it was very positive.”

“What’s driving this is a tremendous cultural shift that’s preceding the political shift,” said Martin Lee, of author Smoke Signals. The AMA is acknowledging “what’s been known for 5,000 years.”

The AMA actually opposed federal cannabis prohibition in 1937. After losing that round, most doctors have toed the Drug War line ever since. “It’s great that they have finally acknowledged there’s some medicinal value in cannabis, but the whole thing is so pathetic,” Lee said.

Most major news media outlets, however, have spun the JAMA papers negatively, embracing the narrative that many uses for medical pot are still based on poor science. News reports noted that of one of the JAMA studies found that “there was low-quality evidence suggesting that cannabinoids were associated with improvements in nausea and vomiting due to chemotherapy, weight gain in HIV infection, sleep disorders, and Tourette syndrome.”

News outlets also pointed to another review that found that “there is some evidence to support the use of marijuana for nausea and vomiting related to chemotherapy, specific pain syndromes, and spasticity from multiple sclerosis. However, for most other indications that qualify by state law for use of medical marijuana, such as hepatitis C, Crohn disease, Parkinson disease, or Tourette syndrome, the evidence supporting its use is of poor quality.”

Cannabis experts say the problem with some of the conclusions in the JAMA studies, and the reporting about them, is that they fail to own up to the main reason why study quality has often been poor: the systematic blockade on pot research. For decades, the federal government has refused to authorize research on the medical benefits of cannabis. As a result, the inconclusiveness of some of the research is more a reflection of the federal ban than of the medical effectiveness of pot. “You know how incredibly hard it is to do research that is intended to confirm benefits of cannabis?” said Warner. “It’s impossible. We still have a huge catch-22.”

Experts also say that the decision by AMA researchers to ignore the research blockade shows their bias. “It’s a national embarrassment. The federal designation that cannabis has no medical value is like saying the moon is made of green cheese,” Lee said. “It seems the AMA can’t say, ‘No, the moon is not made of green cheese.'”

The AMA researchers also fail to acknowledge the real world benefits reported by patients. For example, about one in twenty California adults (1.4 million) have used medical cannabis for a “serious” condition and 92 percent of them have reported that it worked. “We have plenty of evidence that it helps for a lot of things,” Lucido said. “We should always do more research. But we shouldn’t stop people from using it in the meantime.”

The AMA researchers also listed the side effects of cannabis without providing context. “Adverse Effects included dizziness, dry mouth, nausea, fatigue, somnolence, euphoria, vomiting, disorientation, and hallucination,” one of the reports concluded.

But the AMA researchers didn’t compare the adverse side effects of cannabis to those of competing analgesics and anti-inflammatories. Painkiller overdoses are America’s leading epidemic. Ibuprofen, for example, regularly causes kidney failure. But those facts were not mentioned in the JAMA studies. “A full third of the Physician’s Desk Reference is adverse effects, including death,” Lucido said. “Cannabis has about ten adverse effects, at least two of which are often desired.”

The AMA researchers’ statements about cannabis addiction also lacked context. “I imagine sleeping pills probably have a much bigger dependency ratio,” Lucido said.

Still, as half-hearted and equivocal as the JAMA papers were, they contributed to a rising tide of mainstream validation for cannabis that’s washing away its prohibition.

“Culturally, the fight is over. We won,” Lee said. “The pro-cannabis side has conquered the culture. Now politics is catching up.”

Michigan Panel Recommends Allowing Marijuana For Children With Autism

Michigan Panel Recommends Allowing Marijuana For Children With Autism

Michael Komorn, a Michigan attorney who specializes in medical marijuana laws and is also the president of the Michigan Medical Marijuana Association, who filed a petition on behalf of a mother with a child who has Autism in southeastern Michigan spawned a flurry of articles through out the media world.

Please watch the video from the meeting and Michael Komorn’s comments

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4wN8CRGjwAM&sns=em

 

Below are links to numerous media articles related to the issue of adding autism to the list of qualified ailments for Medical Marihuana in Michigan..

LARA omits Autism

State officials on Monday acknowledged they’d omitted hundreds of pages of medical studies from packets supplied to a state review panel slated to consider medical marijuana for treating autism according to the Detroit Free Press.

The panel will reconvene July 31 to reconsider autism, officials said.

Michigan Panel Recommends Allowing Marijuana For Children With Autism

CBS Local – ‎Aug 1, 2015‎

LANSING (AP) – Michigan would become the first state to allow medical marijuana for children with severe autism if a senior official follows the recommendation made Friday by an advisory panel. The state’s Medical Marijuana Review Panel voted 4-2 to …

 

 

Michigan medical marijuana panel votes to add autism treatment to state law

MLive.com – ‎Jul 31, 2015‎

LANSING, MI — The Michigan Medical Marijuana Law Review Panel voted Friday to recommend adding autism as a qualifying condition fit for treatment under the state law. That recommendation now heads to Mike Zimmer, director of the Michigan …

 

 

Michigan a step closer to allowing marijuana for autism

Detroit Free Press – ‎Jul 31, 2015‎

LANSING – Michigan would become the first state to allow medical marijuana for children with severe autism if an official follows the recommendation of a state panel. The Michigan Medical Marijuana Review Panel voted, 4-2, Friday to recommend autism as …

 

 

State Panel To Vote On Medical Marijuana For Autism

CBS Local – ‎Jul 31, 2015‎

LANSING (AP) – A state panel is meeting again to consider whether to add extreme forms of autism to the conditions that qualify for medical marijuana in Michigan. Supporters say oil extracted from marijuana has been effective in controlling severe

 

 

State Board Says People With Autism Should Be Able to Use Medical Marijuana

WMUK – ‎16 hours ago‎

A state board has approved adding autism to the list of conditions that can be treated with medical marijuana. The Michigan Medical Marihuana Review Panel voted 4-2 on Friday to make the recommendation. The final decision will be made by Michigan …

 

 

Michigan Review Panel Includes Autism As Condition For Medical Marijuana …

TestCountry.com (blog) – ‎20 hours ago‎

The Michigan Medical Marijuana Review Panel has recommended to include autism as one of the health conditions that the state approves for medical marijuana treatment. The recommendation, which the panel released on July 31, is one step closer to …

 

 

Michigan Medical Marijuana Panel Approves Autism, A Step Closer To Cannabis …

The Inquisitr – ‎Aug 2, 2015‎

Supporters of medical marijuana in Michigan received some surprising and hopeful news. On Friday, the Michigan Medical Marijuana Review Panel voted to recommend that autism be added to the list of conditions that doctors can prescribe medical …

 

 

Michigan panel recommends permitting marijuana for autism

Observer News – ‎Aug 2, 2015‎

LANSING, Mich. (AP) — Michigan would develop into the primary state to permit medical marijuana for youngsters with extreme autism if a senior official follows the advice made Friday by an advisory panel. The state’s Medical Marijuana Evaluation Panel …

 

 

Michigan Medical Marijuana Review Panel Approves Autism

The Weed Blog (blog) – ‎Aug 1, 2015‎

Fathers high-fived with their children. Old men shed tears. Strangers embraced as if friends. Autism was recommended to be included in the list of illnesses covered under the protections of the Michigan Medical Marihuana Act. Although there still

 

 

State panel endorses medical pot for autism

The Detroit News – ‎Jul 31, 2015‎

In this photo taken on June 26, Ida Chinonis helps her daughter, Bella, take her cannabis based medication at their home in Grand Blanc. Bella, 6, suffers from seizures, and her mother says the only medication that helps her is a cannabis oil. (Photo

 

 

Michigan panel supports pediatric use of medical marijuana for autism

WLNS – ‎Jul 31, 2015‎

(WLNS) – According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention one in every 68 American children have some form of autism. On Friday families directly affected by autism are one step closer toward being able to use marijuana as a form of treatment.

 

 

State panel votes on medical marijuana for autism

Daily Mining Gazette – ‎Jul 31, 2015‎

LANSING, Mich. (AP) — A state panel has recommended that severe forms of autism be added as a condition that qualifies for medical marijuana in Michigan. The Michigan Medical Marijuana Review Panel voted 4-2 Friday to recommend its use. The group’s …

 

 

Review Panel Recommends Marijuana for Autism

WILX-TV – ‎Jul 31, 2015‎

“We’ve been doing all of the regular gammits of everything that doctors recommend for us to do – advanced behavioral analysis therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy. We have him maxed out,” explained Bruno’s Father, Dwight Zahringer.

 

 

State panel votes yes to medicinal marijuana for severe autism

MI News 26 – ‎Jul 31, 2015‎

A state panel met on Friday to consider adding extreme forms of autism to the list of conditions that qualify for the use of medical marijuana in Michigan. In a 4-2 vote, the Michigan Medical Marijuana Review Panel is recommending the approval of a

 

 

State Panel Recommends Allowing Medical Marijuana For Severe Autism

9&10 News – ‎Jul 31, 2015‎

A state panel is recommending Michigan add extreme forms of autism to the conditions that qualify for medical marijuana. In a 4-2 decision, the Michigan Medical Marijuana Review Panel voted to recommend allowing medical marijuana for children with …

 

 

Review Board to Decide if Marijuana Can Treat Autism

WILX-TV – ‎Jul 31, 2015‎

The state’s Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs Marijuana Review Panel is expected to vote today on whether or not medical marijuana can be used as treatment for people with autism. The panel has held a public hearing and reviewed several …

 

 

Can medical marijuana treat autism?

WDIV Detroit – ‎Jul 31, 2015‎

A regulatory panel will consider is autism will be included on the list of things medical marijuana can legally treat. Show Transcript Hide Transcript. THEY JUST DID WHAT THEY HOPED EVERYONE WOULD DO IN THAT SITUATION. Karen: SOME SAY IT’S …

 

 

State Panel To Decide On Treating Autism With Marijuana

WILX-TV – ‎Jul 31, 2015‎

Parents who are in favor of the proposal say medical marijuana in small doses works wonders with kids who have autism, and that it helps with behavioral issues. Opponents say there is no strong evidence the drug is very helpful. LANSING A state panel

 

 

Big Vote On Autism And Medical Marijuana Tomorrow In Michigan

The Weed Blog (blog) – ‎Jul 30, 2015‎

autism cannabis marijuana Multi-talented Michigan attorney Michael Komorn is calling on families of children with autism to attend a crucial vote of the Medical Marihuana Review Panel on July 31st. The Panel is considering whether to recommend approval …

Prosecutors drop marijuana charges against Michigan mom

Prosecutors drop marijuana charges against Michigan mom

Aug 5, 2015 – After a year long battle,  Michigan Attorney Michael Komorn and his staff have chalked up another positive conclusion for a client caught up in the medical marijuana and forfeiture debacle.

Some may consider it  a win, but this slow ruination of a family like so many other Michiganders… should most likely have never occurred.

What’s left to do after this… is to put the shattered pieces back together, emotionally, physically and financially. Then hope the children can go on and forget this ever happened.

The story’s beginning of the end starts here… Read on and you will find out how it began.

 

The Beginning of the End:  Prosecutors drop marijuana charges against Michigan mom.

 

Prosecutors have dropped marijuana charges and will return items seized from a woman in the wake of a Michigan Supreme Court ruling last week.

“I’m elated that this part is over,” said Ginnifer Hency. “…It’s been a long year.”

St. Clair County Prosecutor Michael Wendling said about 18 cases were on hold while prosecution and defense waited on the Supreme Court decision.

“We reevaluated the files that we had pending and at least five were no longer viable in light of the Supreme Court decision,” Wendling said.

“I think that’s an analysis that prosecutors across the state are undertaking.”

The Supreme Court ruling last week clarified when caregivers and users can use their medical marijuana certification as a defense or immunity if charged with a marijuana-related crime. It was the court’s ninth medical marijuana ruling since voters approved the Michigan Medical Marijuana Act in 2008.

“We would have to have specific evidence on those items in order to overcome that burden now that we did not have to show before,” Wendling said.

Wendling said any unresolved civil forfeiture cases connected to those five dismissed cases also will be dismissed, and items seized will be returned.

The Free Press in February reported that police seized more than $24 million in assets from Michiganders in 2013. In many cases the citizens were never charged but lost their property anyway.

Komorn said Hency was arrested and her home raided in July 2014. The medical marijuana caregiver was charged in December 2014 with possession with intent to deliver marijuana.

According to appeal documents from the prosecution, Hency told a Drug Task Force member she had six ounces of marijuana in a locked bag that she intended to exchange for a different strain with another caregiver and give the marijuana to her patients.

Her case was dismissed by visiting District Judge David Nicholson in May after Nicholson found that no crime had occurred.

The prosecutor’s office appealed in circuit court. Oral arguments on the appeal were supposed to be heard by Circuit Judge Michael West Wednesday.

Hency’s lawyer, Michael Komorn hailed the dismissal.

“But that does not eliminate the horror of what they’ve had to deal with the last year,” Komorn said.

“It didn’t come easy. We’ve had to fight for a year.”

Komorn said Hency’s family was devastated by the July 2014 raid on their home and Hency has had trouble finding employment because of the pending narcotics charge.

Hency said authorities seized several items, including a Chevy Impala, two iPhones, an iPad and a ladder, when they raided her home in 2014. The mother of four, who has multiple sclerosis, told Forbes Magazine that they even took her sex toy.

Hency said she appreciated the prosecutor’s decision to dismiss the case “in the interest of justice.” But she said she feels her case isn’t completely finished.

“When I get my stuff back I will consider it over,” Hency said.

From the beginning of the end to when it started

(you should start at the bottom and work your way back up to here)

Prosecutors drop marijuana charges against Michigan woman

Detroit Free Press-2 hours ago

“I’m elated that this part is over,” said Ginnifer Hency. “…It’s been a long … Komorn said Hency was arrested and her home raided in July 2014.

Michigan’s forfeiture laws must change to protect the innocent

MLive.com-Jul 27, 2015

Ginnifer Hency, a medical marijuana patient and caregiver, testifies to the Michigan House Judiciary Committee about her experience with civil …

Ginnifer Hency: Police Raid Mom Of 4 With MS, Seize Everything

The Inquisitr-May 30, 2015

As a mom of four kids, who also must cope with the debilitating disease multiple sclerosis, Ginnifer Hency had enough to deal with in her life …

‘Why take my vibrator?’: Michigan cops legally rob ‘every belonging Raw Story-May 31, 2015

Explore in depth (34 more articles)

4.    Michigan police raid Ginnifer Hency’s home accusing her of being a

Daily Mail-Jun 5, 2015

Ginnifer Hency, 56, suffers from multiple sclerosis, a disease which causes her immune system to attack and destroy healthy nerve cells, and is …

Sex Toy at Center of Michigan Civil Forfeiture Debate Patch.com-Jun 4, 2015

Explore in depth (53 more articles)

5.    Detroit police seize woman’s car and cash without ever accusing her

WXYZ-Jul 8, 2015

… back in May, the House Judiciary Committee heard testimony from other victims of what Irwin calls forfeiture abuse, including Ginnifer Hency.

6.    Why armed drug cops took ‘every belonging’ from a Michigan soccer

Washington Post (blog)-Jun 3, 2015

Just ask Ginnifer Hency. Like Annette Shattuck, Hency is a self-described “soccer mom” and a registered medical marijuana caregiver.

Vibrator taken during marijuana police raid, says woman MyFox Chicago-Jun 3, 2015

Explore in depth (3 more articles)

7.    VIDEO: Michigan Cops Raid Medical Marijuana Patient, Legally Rob

Mintpress News (blog)-Jun 1, 2015

Raw Story reports — Medical marijuana user Ginnifer Hency told a group of … Forbes contributor Jacob Sullum reported last week that Hency …

Armed Robbers With Badges: ‘They Took Everything’ Reason (blog)-Jun 1, 2015

8.    Mich. women testify on asset forfeiture before state legislature panel

Washington Post-Jun 1, 2015

June 1, 2015 10:36 AM EDT – Ginnifer Hency and Annette Shattuck, two mothers who are registered medical marijuana caregivers, testified on …

Vibrator taken during marijuana police raid, says woman

MyFOXPhilly.com-Jun 2, 2015

DETROIT (FOX 2 WJBK)- Ginnifer Hency says that police raid led investigators to seize a couple of guns, a small amount of cash and cell …

Medical Marijuana Patient Protests After House Raided, Vibrator CBS Local-Jun 1, 2015

Armed Robbers With Badges: ‘They Took Everything’ Reason (blog)-Jun 1, 2015

VIDEO: Michigan Cops Raid Medical Marijuana Patient, Legally Rob Mintpress News (blog)-Jun 1, 2015

Security Systems – You should have one!!

Security Systems – You should have one!!

For most… a security video system is a tool to protect themselves from liability, false accusations and identify activities around their home or business.  For some,  such as thieves, those who make false accusations and liars…it works against them.

 

There can not be enough said about video security systems and how they can vindicate or convict. 

 

That said….One should have a security system and it should be specially installed to protect you against both sides of the law.

 

Picture… a raid at your home or business because of something someone said or an assumption of guilt. Law enforcement will take the system (as well as anything else they desire) and claim it’s evidence.  They might even try to defeat it pre-raid. Most likely you will never see it again.

You have to be prepared.  You have to have it specially designed so you can retain this evidence also.  It’s not the cheapest way to go but in the end it will save you a lot of time and money by protecting yourself!!!  That is a fact from experience.

Picture…a break in at your home or business.  Professional thieves may be prepared for security system by defeating it or simply wearing a mask.  You can defeat their counter tactics in several ways.  But most thieves are just opportunists and will not even notice the system.

 

There are also specialized alarm systems that contact only you and whoever you assign.  These work very well.  Sometimes that’s better than the police.  In some cities who knows if they will show up at all.

 

Here you can research a professional and confidential installation service provider and review some systems.  It is best to hire someone experienced to consult and plan before you install a system. -> Link

 

You can also do some research on some other posted video footage.  Take note on whether you can identify someone or color or even type of vehicle.  There are a lot of bad video systems and a lot of companies dumping old cheaply manufactured boxed systems with misleading specs. Also don’t be mislead by the perfect pictures on the box.  It doesn’t work that way in real life.-> Link

 

A recent post on MLive shows a positive point…

Two teens on  were caught stealing medical marijuana from a home in Brandon Township, a community in northern Oakland County.

Oakland County sheriff’s deputies say an 18-year-old man and 16-year-old girl broke into the home of a woman about 2 p.m. They didn’t take valuable items or electronics, but marijuana the woman says she has to treat medical ailments.

Fortunately she’d recently had a video surveillance system installed at her home and footage helped Oakland County sheriff’s deputies ID the suspects.

 

 

Michigan panel recommends allowing medical marijuana for autism

Michigan panel recommends allowing medical marijuana for autism

Michael Komorn, a Michigan attorney who specializes in medical marijuana laws and is also the president of the Michigan Medical Marijuana Association, who filed a petition on behalf of a mother in southeastern Michigan, said no other state allows medical marijuana for severe autism.

This inspired several posts including MLive and the Washington Times. The post stated Michigan would become the first state to allow medical marijuana for children with severe autism if a senior official follows the recommendation made Friday by an advisory panel.

The state’s Medical Marijuana Review Panel voted 4-2 to recommend autism as a condition that qualifies for the drug.

Supporters say the extracted oil from marijuana when swallowed has been effective in controlling extreme physical behavior by kids with severe autism. It wouldn’t be smoked.

The panel was influenced by comments from some Detroit-area doctors, especially the head of pediatric neurology at Children’s Hospital of Michigan, and parents desperate for relief.

Now the recommendation go before Mike Zimmer, who is the director of the Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs. He has until late October to make a final decision.

Voting in favor of allowing it, Dr. David Crocker, a panel member noted that two doctors need to give their approval for a child to get a medical marijuana card from the state.

“We have a pretty good checks-and-balances system,” he said.

Michigan’s chief medical executive, Dr. Eden Wells, serves on the panel and voted no. She’s not convinced that there’s enough research on the topic, especially the long-term effects of marijuana on children.

The same panel rejected an autism petition in 2013 in what had been called a final decision. Smith’s petition was initially denied by LARA, but she successfully sued to force reconsideration.

The review panel voted 4-2 in favor of a petition submitted by Lisa Smith, a Michigan mother who has said cannabis oil has helped improve her severely autistic 6-year-old son’s behavior, sleep patterns and eating schedule.

Attorney Michael Komorn, who represents Smith, said her petition included hundreds of pages of research on autism and medical marijuana that was not included in the 2013 debate.

Smith’s son was certified to use medical marijuana because he also has epilepsy, which is already a treatable medical condition under the law.

“Otherwise, she would not have been able to get a recommendation from her doctor to see the benefits that it had on autism,” Komorn said. “She’s heroic in that she came forward and was able to tell her story so that this could happen.”

“These things are things we do not know until we have enough experience with these medications in a controlled trial. … I don’t think we have those checks and balances,” Wells said.

Experts writing in the February edition of the Journal of Developmental & Behavioral Pediatrics cautioned that marijuana for kids with severe autism might serve only as a “last-line therapy.”

Only one condition, post-traumatic stress disorder, has been added to those that qualify since Michigan voters approved marijuana for the side effects of cancer and a few other illnesses in 2008.