Michigan medical marijuana law does not protect liars court of appeals says

Michigan medical marijuana law does not protect liars court of appeals says

LANSING, MI -- Michigan courts and police continue to work within a gray created by state marijuana legalization that contradicts federal law.

Not only are lines blurred by conflicting jurisdictional laws, and complicated by the division of the state’s medical and recreational statutes, but Michigan courts operate, in part, based on precedents established under the now-faulty premise that marijuana is illegal.

A court ruling  could help to tidy things up a bit. The Court of Appeals in an opinion published Feb. 13, 2020 ruled that, while police must have more evidence than simply the scent of marijuana to justify a warrant-less vehicle search, lying or deceiving police may change that.

In November 2018, Trooper Allan Park of the Michigan State Police stopped medical marijuana caregiver Thomas Moorman at a gas station in the Upper Peninsula’s Alger County for speeding.

Park claimed he smelled “a strong odor of fresh marijuana emanating from the vehicle, which indicated to him that there was a ‘good quantity’ of marijuana in the vehicle,” the Court of Appeals said in their ruling.

Moorman said he had no marijuana but as questioning persisted, he admitted that he harvested some marijuana earlier in the day. He also told the trooper he was a registered medical marijuana caregiver with five assigned patients, the Court of Appeals said.

The court ruled. " ... We conclude that defendant’s behavior (denying the presence of marijuana) was inconsistent with being in lawful possession of marijuana ... This behavior, in conjunction with the odor of marijuana, gave rise to probable cause ...

The court did not address how possession of recreational marijuana might impact an officer’s right to conduct a vehicle search.

Read More @Mlive.

Case Law Reference

People v Williams, 472 Mich 308, 315; 696 NW2d 636 (2005).

“[U]nder the automobile exception, the police may search a motor vehicle without the necessity of first obtaining a warrant if probable cause to support the search exists.”

Kazmierczak, 461 Mich at 418-419.

In Kazmierczak, this Court held that “the smell of marijuana alone by a person qualified to know the odor may establish probable cause to search a motor vehicle, pursuant to the motor vehicle exception to the warrant requirement.” Kazmierczak, 461 Mich at 413.

Search of vehicle after drug odor ruled illegal

Search of vehicle after drug odor ruled illegal

A judge's ruling that a vehicle search prompted by an odor of marijuana was illegal.

An Pennsylvania judge has ruled that state police who said they smelled marijuana in a vehicle weren't allowed to search the vehicle once they were shown the driver's medical marijuana card.

The (Allentown) Morning Call reports that a Lehigh County judge tossed out evidence cited in support of drug and firearms counts stemming from the Nov. 7 search of the vehicle in Allentown.

"The smell of marijuana is no longer per se indicative of a crime," Judge Maria Dantos wrote in her opinion filed earlier this month.

Prosecutors must now decide whether to appeal to state Superior Court or try to move forward without the evidence.

Defense attorney Joshua Karoly said the ruling could help change a rule allowing police to search based solely on the odor of drugs.

An eastern Pennsylvania judge has ruled that state police troopers who said they smelled marijuana in a vehicle weren't allowed to search the vehicle once they were shown the driver's medical marijuana card.

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"The smell of marijuana is no longer per se indicative of a crime," Judge Maria Dantos wrote in her opinion filed Friday.

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