Pubdate: Thu, 25 Aug 2011 Source: Detroit Free Press (MI) Copyright: 2011 Detroit Free Press Contact: http://www.freep.com/article/99999999/opinion04/50926009 Website: http://www.freep.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/125 Authors: John Wisely, Megha Satyanarayana and Bill Laitner, Detroit Free Press Staff Writers COULD COURT RULING BE THE END OF MEDICINAL POT SHOPS IN MICHIGAN? Medical marijuana dispensaries in Michigan may have to close their doors after a potentially far-reaching court decision Wednesday declared Compassionate Apothecary in Mt. Pleasant a public nuisance. The unanimous ruling by the three-judge panel of the state Court of Appeals was declared a statewide precedent by Attorney General Bill Schuette, an opponent of the 2008 voter-passed law legalizing marijuana for medical use. "The court made it clear that these dispensaries, these pot shops, have to be closed down," he said. At issue was whether certified users could store pot and sell excess to other patients. Many of the nearly 100,000 Michiganders certified to use marijuana for pain relief go to dispensaries. Patients also can grow their own pot or get it from a caregiver. Michigan Medical Marijuana Magazine estimates 400 to 500 dispensaries are in business statewide. Sticking point in medical pot debate: Does Michigan law allow dispensaries? Michigan voters approved the use of medical marijuana in 2008, but police, prosecutors, lawyers and judges are still arguing over what they approved. Critics and supporters of the drug disagreed again Wednesday, after a three-judge panel of the Michigan Court of Appeals ruled unanimously that the law allowed the medical use of marijuana in limited circumstances, but not the sale of the drug. The court ordered the closure of Compassionate Apothecary, a Mt. Pleasant dispensary that was selling marijuana to people certified to buy it for medical purposes, ruling that the facility operators have no authority under the law to operate a "dispensary that actively engages in and carries out patient-to-patient sales" of marijuana. The ruling, which can be used as precedent to close similar facilities across the state, was signed by appellate judges Joel Hoekstra, Christopher Murray and Cynthia Diane Stephens. Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette hailed the ruling as a victory for local communities trying to keep out pot shops. "Nobody voted to have pot shops across from schools and churches," Schuette said. "The court of appeals unanimously cleared the air that these dispensaries, these pot shops -- really drug houses -- are not legal. " Medical marijuana defense attorneys disagreed, saying dispensaries could stay open under certain conditions. "We think the Court of Appeals kind of missed the point," said James Rasor, a Royal Oak attorney who specializes in the murky medical marijuana law. "This ruling does nothing but impermissibly infringe on the rights of the voters. I think this is political." The court purposefully declined to "reach the issue (of) whether the" law "permits uncompensated patient-to-patient conveyances" of marijuana, said Eric VanDussen, a Traverse City activist who often films courtroom arguments on the topic. "I see lots of nonprofits popping up around the state in the place of the many other business models that everyone has been using." He added that he doesn't think the court ruling precludes facilities from charging for a pack of rolling papers and giving away a free gram of medical marijuana. Schuette said facilities that continue to operate "do so at their peril," risking criminal charges, nuisance complaints and more legal troubles. Rick Thompson, editor-in-chief of Michigan Medical Marijuana Magazine, said the ruling effectively shuts down the state's 400 to 500 dispensaries, which allow sales in a safe place between people who trust one another, rather than on the streets between strangers. "Other than a place like this, people would have to go back into neighborhoods," he said Wednesday at his office in Big Daddy's Management Group in Oak Park. Big Daddy's serves about 3,500 certified patients in five locations, including about 100 low-income patients who pay nothing to Big Daddy's for their marijuana. The issue is whether certified patients who don't want to grow their own pot can buy it from someone else. Growing marijuana inside is expensive, with electric bills alone running up to $600 to $700 per month, Thompson said. "Patient access will be affected," he said, but so will state government, which has collected $8 million in patient-registration fees. Tony Urquhart, 35, of Detroit said he spends $30-$40 every two weeks to buy a quarter-ounce of marijuana to treat pain in his legs from a 1995 gunshot wound that left him paralyzed below the waist. "It takes the pain to a manageable level," he said. "It's back to the streets, I guess." Oakland County has already closed four dispensaries, and Prosecutor Jessica Cooper said the ruling validates the county's actions. "It has always been my position that the act was passed for compassion, not profit," Cooper said. "The opinion spent considerable space discussing the Public Health Code and the fact that no one, not even a pharmacist, is permitted to dispense a Schedule 1 drug (such as marijuana)." The law voters approved allows certified patients to use the drug without facing prosecution, but it doesn't spell out a system for delivery, said Robert Sedler, a law professor at Wayne State University. "The law doesn't contemplate dispensaries, rather, it contemplates that the person who uses it, grows it, or their caregiver grows it," Sedler said. "It was really directed at letting people grow their own marijuana. Clearly, the law didn't allow for dispensaries." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.