Pubdate: Thu, 05 May 2011
Source: Missoulian (MT)
Copyright: 2011 Missoulian
Contact:  http://www.missoulian.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/720
Author: Gwen Florio, The Missoulian

JASON CHRIST SUES HEALTH DEPARTMENT FOR NOT RENEWING HIS MEDICAL MARIJUANA CARD

Jason Christ, the face of the explosive growth of the medical
marijuana business in Montana, can no longer legally smoke the
cannabis he so aggressively promoted.

The Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services has yet to
renew his medical marijuana card, which expired April 17.

Christ has sued.

Christ smokes medical marijuana to control the pain of Crohn's
disease, according to the complaint he filed this week in Missoula
County District Court. Without his marijuana, his "pain levels have
risen significantly," he wrote in the suit, one of several he's filed
in District Court. He's seeking $7,000 from DPHHS.

Christ became well-known for smoking marijuana in public places such
as the Capitol lawn, and claimed last year in an interview with the
Missoulian to have signed up 80 percent of Montana's medical marijuana
patients, who then stood at 23,000. Now, nearly 30,000 people have
cards.

But even as the Montana Legislature cracks down on medical marijuana
use in this state, Christ is expanding his business - to Arizona.

Christ sought, and received, permission in Missoula County District
Court this week to travel there to tend to a new branch of
CannabisCare, whose headquarters until recently were located at Orange
and Front streets.

CannabisCare's website advertises offices in Phoenix, Tucson and
Flagstaff.

CannabisCare neither grows nor dispenses marijuana; instead, it links
would-be patients with doctors who can provide recommendations, either
at traveling clinics or online teleclinics.

The Montana Board of Medical Examiners has forbidden teleclinics, but
the CannabisCare website continues to advertise them, including online
doctor visits via webcam Thursday and this coming Tuesday.

Jean Branscum, executive director of the Board of Medical Examiners,
said the board cannot take action without a complaint.

"We don't regulate the business, we regulate the people," she said.
The board has received seven complaints about medical marijuana
businesses, she said, but declined to specify which ones.

***

CannabisCare's website also promises to post documents that people can
use to sue the state of Montana over its new medical marijuana
legislation. "The Montana State Constitution says that we can sue the
(expletive) out of our government," the site said.

Christ has increasingly become embroiled in a series of lawsuits and
countersuits, filing actions against former employees and competitors
for breach of contract and theft, even as his employees sued him for
intolerable working conditions and, in one recent case, sought a
protection from abuse order.

He also faces intimidation charges in connection with an August
incident involving the Verizon store on South Reserve, in which he
allegedly threatened to bomb the store because of poor service.

It's because of those charges that Christ needed court permission to
leave the state. (He was arrested in March after taking an Allegiant
flight to Mesa, Ariz.) On Tuesday, Deputy Missoula County Attorney
Andrew Paul objected to Christ's most recent travel request, saying
he'd spoken with authorities in Arizona, who told him Christ had made
threats there against Verizon.

But Christ's attorney, Peter Lacny of the Datsopoulos, MacDonald and
Lind law firm, countered that no charges were expected as a result of
that complaint.

Meanwhile, Christ recently filed another lawsuit in Missoula County
District Court, this one against Alltel, the company he turned to
after "a horrible experience" with Verizon, according to the suit.

Alltel terminated his service after he "over-complained," the suit
said, adding that Alltel termed those complaints "threats."

The suits seeks $154,000 from Alltel. 
- ---
MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.