Woman jailed for 5 months after vitamins mistaken for drugs

Woman jailed for 5 months after vitamins mistaken for drugs

A mother with no criminal record of 4 separated from her family and children after being jailed for vitamins being mistaken for drugs in a widely used drug test kit by police.

These Duquenois Levine reagent tests for marijuana will test positive for most any substances, candies, even the air will make them change color and false positive alert for a controlled substance.

Never consent to a search by a police officer. Tell the officer you do not consent to a search and ask if you are free to go. Don’t answer any questions , tell the officer you want your lawyer present during any questioning. These important phrases will keep you out of trouble and protect your constitutional rights!

 

Canceled Meeting Means More Delays for Medical Marijuana Licenses in Michigan

Canceled Meeting Means More Delays for Medical Marijuana Licenses in Michigan

LANSING — The Michigan Medical Marijuana Licensing Board was supposed to give out the first licenses to cannabis businesses next week.

But those businesses will have to wait another month before they can open their doors after Monday’s meeting was cancelled on Friday.

The cancellation came after one board member said they couldn’t make the meeting and another said they would have a difficult time making it there in time. David Harns, spokesman for the state Department of Licensing and Regulation, wouldn’t reveal which members weren’t able to attend.

The board was set to award licenses to four applicants that represent four large marijuana growing operations, a secure transport company, a dispensary in Ann Arbor and a processor. They also were supposed to consider pre-qualifying 10 applicants for a variety of medical marijuana businesses.

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Introduced to the Senate – S.1689 – The Marijuana Justice Act of 2017

Introduced to the Senate – S.1689 – The Marijuana Justice Act of 2017

Sponsor: Sen. Booker, Cory A. [D-NJ]

(Introduced 08/01/2017)

Committees:Senate – Judiciary

Latest Action:Senate – 08/01/2017 Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary.  (All Actions)

 

Shown Here:
Introduced in Senate (08/01/2017)

Marijuana Justice Act of 2017

This bill amends the Controlled Substances Act:

  • to remove marijuana and tetrahydrocannabinols from schedule I; and
  • to eliminate criminal penalties for an individual who imports, exports, manufactures, distributes, or possesses with intent to distribute marijuana.

It prohibits and reduces certain federal funds for a state without a statute legalizing marijuana, if the Bureau of Justice Assistance determines that such a state has a disproportionate arrest rate or disproportionate incarceration rate for marijuana offenses.

The bill directs federal courts to expunge convictions for marijuana use or possession.

Finally, it establishes in the Treasury the Community Reinvestment Fund. Amounts in the fund may be used by the Department of Housing and Urban Development to establish a grant program to reinvest in communities most affected by the war on drugs.

Detroit city officials consider a new proposal to cap medical marijuana facilities

Detroit city officials consider a new proposal to cap medical marijuana facilities

June 12, 2018
The Detroit News

Detroit — City officials are considering a new proposal that would cap the number of medical marijuana facilities operating in the city to 75 and lay out regulations for where they can locate.

The ordinance, which also includes provisions for how large the operations can be, is the latest by Detroit to combat a proliferation of so-called pot shops in the city in recent years.

Detroit City Councilman James Tate submitted the zoning ordinance changes last month to the City Planning Commission for a review and recommendation. The ordinance will then be introduced for council’s consideration.

The legislation would establish rules for facilities in Detroit that grow, test, process, transport and dispense medical marijuana to patients with state-approved medical marijuana cards.

It also would encourage medical marijuana operators to provide community benefits in their licensing operations, city officials said.

“The goal has always been to ensure that we have an industry that is respectful of the neighborhoods, the communities it is located in, but also considerate to individuals seeking safe access to alternative medication,” Tate said in a statement. “This ordinance balances those two needs with the preservation of neighborhoods being the top priority.”

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The Detroit News

Published 2:19 a.m. ET June 12, 2018

Marijuana ordinance repealed in Michigan’s Kalamazoo County

Marijuana ordinance repealed in Michigan’s Kalamazoo County

Jun 13, 12:16 PM

ROSS TOWNSHIP, MI — Residents of a rural township in Kalamazoo County are breathing a bit easier as their organized resistance to medical marijuana appears to be paying off.

Tuesday, the Ross Township Board of Trustees repealed an ordinance that legalizes medical marijuana facilities and sets a process for obtaining permission to open them. A second ordinance dealing with the zoning districts marijuana businesses can open was not repealed.

Supervisor Gary Moore said the township is going to “take a step back, revisit and take another swing” at creating marijuana ordinances that align with the community’s interests. The Planning Commission will be charged with reexamining the zoning districts where marijuana facilities could open.

“Ross Township is a good community and we are going to work our way through this,” Moore said.

Kalamazoo County Clerk Tim Snow said he was notified by residents that a petition to recall the township board would be turned in to his office Wednesday afternoon.

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By Malachi Barrett

Despite complaints, state sticks with pricey asset requirements for medical pot licenses

Despite complaints, state sticks with pricey asset requirements for medical pot licenses

Old News But Still Relevant…Who’s the Kingpin?

Despite complaints, state sticks with pricey asset requirements for medical pot licenses

The state will stick with high capitalization requirements for people getting into the medical marijuana industry, but is expanding what qualifies as an asset.

The capitalization requirements will stay at the proposed rates of $150,000 for the class A growing license for people who want to grow up to 500 plants and up to $500,000 for a Class C growing license, which allows for between 1,001 and 1,500 plants.

The requirements don’t mean that a potential medical marijuana business person has to have that much cash. They just have to show that they have enough assets to support the business.

And in an effort to make it easier for businesses to qualify for a license, only 25% of those assets will have to be liquid — something easily converted into cash, such as retirement accounts, stocks and bonds, bank accounts or marijuana inventory. The rest can be real estate, equipment or supplies for the business.

The ruling from the state Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs this week comes despite a public hearing last month where dozens of people argued that the high asset requirements will put the medical marijuana business out of reach for small operators.

“We’ve looked at some of the numbers that go into the regulatory costs and that this is a program that was supposed to be self-supporting,” said Andrew Brisbo, director of the state’s Bureau of Medical Marijuana Regulation. “We want to make sure the applicants have the financial capability to pay those costs to get in to the industry and to be financially viable in the long run.”

Jerry Millen, who hopes to get a state license to open the Green Way medical marijuana dispensary in Walled Lake, said the capitalization requirements won’t be a problem for him. He’s already purchased and outfitted a building and coming up with 25% of liquid assets is doable.

“I think there are good people and bad people in the industry,” he said. “And I think the state just wants to weed out some of the bad people.”

But Christina Montague, an Ann Arbor resident who is hoping to open a dispensary in Washtenaw County, said the capitalization requirements could keep small business owners like her out of the market.

“I don’t know if I’ll be able to raise $300,000,” she said during a recent meeting of the Michigan Medical Marijuana Licensing Board. “It’s not too much if you’re a millionaire or a big corporation, but if you’re just an everyday person and you want to be a part of this movement because you believe in it, they’ve got to give the middle-class guys a break.”

Under the rules imposed by LARA, applicants would have to show the following proof of assets when they apply for a license:

  • $300,000 for a dispensary
  • $150,000 for a grower of up to 500 medical marijuana plants
  • $300,000 for a grower of up to 1,000 plants
  • $500,000 for a grower of up to 1,500 plants
  • $300,000 for a processing facility
  • $200,000 for a secure transporter
  • $200,000 for testing facility

In addition to the capitalization requirements, a municipality can charge up to $5,000 to get approval to operate in the city. The application fee for the state is going to run between $4,000 and $8,000 depending on the license, and the state regulatory assessment will cost between $10,000 and $57,000. License applicants would also have to prove that they were are able to get insurance policies that provide at least $100,000 of coverage.

Brisbo said the department came up with the figures when looking at the asset requirements in other states, including Arizona, which requires $150,000 in assets for a dispensary; Connecticut, which requires $2 million each in assets for a growing or processing operation, and Nevada, which requires $250,000 in liquid assets for growers, processors, testers and dispensaries.

Applications for medical marijuana licenses will be available from the state on Dec. 15 and the licensing board is expected to begin awarding licenses in the first quarter of 2018.

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Contact Kathleen Gray: 313-223-4430, kgray99@freepress.com or on Twitter @michpoligal