Pubdate: Mon, 06 Feb 2012
Source: Daily Tribune, The (Royal Oak, MI)
Copyright: 2012 The Daily Tribune
Contact:  http://www.dailytribune.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1579
Author: Jameson Cook, Daily Tribune Staff Writer

ATTORNEY GENERAL TRYING TO SHUT DOWN MACOMB COUNTY MARIJUANA FACILITY

Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette is again trying to shut down a
Chesterfield Township medical marijuana dispensary, claiming it sold
marijuana outside the rules of the law.

Judge John Foster scheduled a Feb. 13 show-cause hearing for attorneys
to argue Schuette's claim Big Daddy's Hydroponics and Compassion
Center violated the law when it sold marijuana to an undercover
officer armed with a medical marijuana license but who didn't list Big
Daddy's as his caregiver.

Schutte in a motion filed Wednesday in Macomb County Circuit Court in
Mount Clemens asks Foster "to order the occupants vacate the property;
the business be padlocked for a period of one year; the illegal
contraband destroyed pursuant to law; and all contents of the premises
be removed and sold."

He also seeks a $7,500 fine or 93 days in jail, as allowed by the
law.

The request comes as part of an ongoing legal battle between Big
Daddy's on Gratiot Avenue and Chesterfield Township, which was joined
by Schuette, over the 2008 Medical Marijuana Act passed by voters in
2008. The act allows people to register as a patient or caregiver; a
caregiver can produce marijuana for personal use and five other
licensed patients.

Schuette and the township argue that a caregiver must supply a
specific five people who name the caregiver on their cards, while Big
Daddy's contends that a caregiver can provide to any five licensed
patients.

Schuette says that on Jan, 25, undercover cop James Ruthenberg, a
Harper Woods police officer who has worked on the County of Macomb
Enforcement Team, the anti-drug unit, purchased a $20 membership at
Big Daddy's using a fictitious identification and corresponding MMA
patient license and bought 6.2 grams, $60 worth, of "Bubba Kush"
marijuana from a caregiver "Katie." Ruthenberg did not name anyone as
a caregiver on his card.

Big Daddy's attorney Corbett O'Meara, said Friday he will not contest
the facts of the case but that Katie's actions were legal. He said
this situation has not been resolved by the courts.

The plain language of the Act allows it," O'Meara said. "It's our
contention that this issue has not been specifically resolved. This is
exactly the issue that needs to be resolved."

The case is scheduled for trial the next day in front of Foster on the
zoning issues, but O'Meara said that it could be delayed because
whoever loses Schuette's request likely will appeal to the state Court
of Appeals.

The township sued Big Daddy's in July.

Foster on Nov. 30 ordered Big Daddy's to not produce, possess or
exchange marijuana on its premises. In December, he clarified it to
say the facility could keep and sell marijuana within the rules of the
MMA. Zoning and occupancy issues remain. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.