Pubdate: Mon, 01 Nov 2010 Source: Missoulian (MT) Copyright: 2010 Missoulian Contact: http://www.missoulian.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/720 Author: Gwen Florio JUDGE STOPS MARIJUANA SHOP RUN BY FORMER EMPLOYEES OF MISSOULA POT ENTREPRENEUR Three former employees of Missoula marijuana entrepreneur Jason Christ have been ordered to stop operating their own medical pot consulting business as their lawsuit against him proceeds. Missoula District Court Judge Dusty Deschamps granted the temporary restraining order Friday, but refused Christ's additional request to dismiss the suit entirely. In August, Tiffany Klang, John Phillips and Nicole Harrington of Missoula sued Christ, known nationwide for his rolling "cannabis caravans" where doctors provide hundreds of medical marijuana recommendations in a single day, contending that many of those applications were falsified. Their wrongful discharge suit also accuses their former employer of using company funds for personal expenses, driving a company van while smoking pot, and creating a work environment so hostile that they were forced to quit on June 18. After the three left Christ's Montana Caregivers Network, they formed their own corporation, identified in an affidavit as "406 Alternative Care Consultants." That business, also known as "Rolling Numbers," helps medical marijuana caregivers keep track of their plant numbers, which are set by law, as well as other paperwork required by the business, said Billings attorney Chris Lindsey, who represents the three. "It doesn't cater to patients, hire doctors or make recommendations," employees said in affidavits. Deschamps' restraining order applies to "any business enaged in the same business as Montana Caregivers Network within Missoula County" owned or run by the three. As to whether his clients' business had actually shut down operations, Lindsey said Monday that its client base is so small that the issue was likely moot. "They're quite capable of serving the clients they have without necessarily engaging in any business activities between now and Thursday," when a hearing in the case is scheduled, he said. Lindsey said he'd use that hearing to detail the difference between his clients' business and Christ's. But Christ, who required his employees to sign a non-disclosure agreement that applies in a 500-mile radius for five years from the date they leave Montana Caregivers, said Monday that "every business has a right to protect their trade secrets." In a 256-page answer to his former employees' claims, Christ countered that, far from being stressful, "the working environment at Montana Caregivers is one that focuses on peace and ending suffering." To reduce stress, he wrote, the firm provided "fringe benefits like massages on clinic runs, massages during the workday, company meals, gift cards, yoga, meditation, free medicine and communal activities like hacky-sack." He also wrote that Klang was paid $10 per hour for a 40- to 60-hour week, unless the company was running one of its clinics, in which case her work week was closer to 80 hours. In his motion to dismiss the suit against him, Christ referred to it as "a hodgepodge of unsupported assertions, irrelevant platitudes, and legalistic gibberish." "The court disagrees," Deschamps wrote simply. In fact, he added, "the Court finds there are numerous allegations in the complaint that are more than "'legalistic gibberish' or "'irrelevant platitudes' and may have some merit in the eyes of the jury." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D