Pubdate: Thu, 17 Mar 2011
Source: Daily Tribune, The (Royal Oak, MI)
Copyright: 2011 The Daily Tribune
Contact:  http://www.dailytribune.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1579
Author: Carol Hopkins, For the Daily Tribune
Photo: Bill Schuette http://www.mapinc.org/images/BillSchuette.jpg
Cited: Michigan Medical Marijuana Magazine http://4mmagazine.com/
Referenced: Traverse City Record-Eagle article 
http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v10/n978/a09.htm
Referenced: Michigan Medical Marijuana Act http://drugsense.org/url/8mvr7sW8
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Bill+Schuette
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Michigan+Medical+Marijuana+Magazine
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?275 (Cannabis - Michigan)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?224 (Cannabis and Driving)

MEDICAL MARIJUANA ADVOCATES: STATE HAS US IN 'CATCH 22'

Oakland County medical marijuana advocates are unhappy about Michigan 
Attorney General Bill Schuette's reaction to a case concerning a 
medical marijuana card-holder who was arrested for driving under the 
influence of drugs.

Schuette filed a brief in support of the Grand Traverse County 
prosecutor's appeal to the Michigan Court of Appeals in People v. 
Koon, a case in which Koon, a medical marijuana user, was charged 
with driving with marijuana in his system.

Michigan's motor vehicle code prohibits drivers from operating a 
motor vehicle with any amount of a Schedule 1 substance in the body.

Schuette argued that while the Medical Marijuana Act "provides 
limited protection to certain individuals who use marijuana in 
accordance with the act, it does not offer protection to those who 
then drive with marijuana in their system.

"Therefore, the zero-tolerance standard established by the Michigan 
motor vehicle code should followed to protect public safety."

Rick Thompson, editor of Oak Park-based Michigan Medical Marijuana 
Magazine, said he believed "it's obvious the Attorney General isn't 
using common sense."

Thompson called trying to balance zero-tolerance with the Medical 
Marihuana Act a "Catch 22."

"You're allowed to be a (medical marijuana) patient but you are not 
allowed to drive," he said.

"Zero tolerance is a bad policy. It's going to cost honest patients 
their liberty."

John W. Hart, a Lake Orion resident who has followed medical 
marijuana cases and coverage in Michigan, applauds Schuette's position.

"It (medical marijuana) is all a farce. The law has so many gray 
areas," said Hart.

"You can't operate a motor vehicle with medical marijuana in your 
system. It's the law."

Jeffrey Perlman, a Southfield-based attorney who has advocated for 
medical marijuana patients and caregivers in the recent Oakland 
County cases, disagrees with the Attorney General's stance.

"Medical marijuana stays in a person's system for up to 30 days, but 
it doesn't mean you are impaired," he said.

"To take a person's driving privileges away because they are on a 
medicine you don't approve of - but a doctor does - is unacceptable."

Oakland County Prosecutor Jessica Cooper noted that "driving under 
the influence is not even allowed under the state medical marijuana act.

"It's not a defense."

Rodney Koon was charged on May 21, 2010 by the Grand Traverse County 
Prosecutor's office for driving under the influence of a drug (OUID).

Koon, a medical marijuana user, had been stopped for speeding on Feb. 
3, 2010 and admitted to smoking marijuana that day. A blood test 
showed evidence of active THC - the psychoactive ingredient in 
marijuana - in Koon's system.

The Traverse City Record-Eagle reported Koon said he smoked marijuana 
six hours before he was stopped.

Grand Traverse County district and circuit courts concluded that 
language in the Michigan Medical Marihuana Act superseded the motor 
vehicle code and required the prosecutor to demonstrate Koon was 
actually impaired by the marijuana in his system.

"This law must not be interpreted in a way that puts the safety of 
people on the roads at risk," said Schuette.

"Michigan law makes clear that driving with drugs in your system is 
illegal. Allowing anyone to do so puts the lives of our families and 
friends unnecessarily in jeopardy."