Pubdate: Sun, 16 Nov 2008
Source: Bay City Times, The (MI)
Copyright: 2008 The Bay City Times
Contact: http://www.mlive.com/mailforms/bctimes/letters/index.ssf/
Website: http://www.mlive.com/bctimes/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1453
Author: Crystal Mcmorris
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)

POT GROWER IS NOW A PATIENT, AS SOON AS HE CAN GET ON THE REGISTRY

Larry Myers was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 1980, when he
woke up to numbness in his limbs one morning while on his honeymoon in
California.

Since then, the 55-year-old Pinconning man has found relief in
marijuana. The only thing that helps calm the spasms the disease
causes is puffing on a pipeload of pot. He said his doctor is aware of
his use and advised him to continue using it if it provides relief
from his symptoms.

Myers is glad the law legalizing marijuana for medical use has passed,
but wishes it included provisions to get prescriptions written and
filled.

''As someone who's got some experience growing marijuana, I'll tell
you it's not such an easy thing,'' he said, ''especially for a person
who's dying of cancer or something.''

Myers has pleaded guilty twice to marijuana-related crimes in Bay
County. In 1987, police took the media along for a raid of the home he
lived in at the time on Kaiser Tower Road. They found marijuana plants
growing in a semi-trailer in his backyard. Myers pleaded guilty to a
misdemeanor and served probation but no jail time.

''I had three kinds of pot,'' Myers said. ''Good, better and best. The
state police said it was the best marijuana they had ever seized. It
was dubbed in High Times (marijuana magazine) as Pinconning
Paralyzer.''

Myers again pleaded guilty in 2007 to delivery of marijuana after he
says a friend of a friend set him up.

''I'm a convicted felon now,'' Myers said, sitting in a wheelchair in
his modest home, overlooking the Saginaw Bay.

Myers says he plans to get himself on the marijuana patient registry
as soon as he figures out how so that he can legally continue using
his medicine of choice.

''I think it's great that the voters of Michigan passed Proposal 1,''
Myers said. ''I don't want to have to worry about getting arrested
again.''
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MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin