Pubdate: Wed, 01 Aug 2012 Source: Grand Rapids Press (MI) Copyright: 2012 Grand Rapids Press Contact: http://www.mlive.com/grand-rapids/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/171 Author: Barton Deiters COURT OF APPEALS KNOCKS DOWN WYOMING MARIJUANA ORDINANCE WYOMING, MI - Wyoming's ordinance regulating the use of marijuana has been voided by the Michigan Court of Appeals in a decision released this morning. In reversing the decision of Kent County Circuit Court Judge Dennis Leiber, the court agreed with attorney John Ter Beek that the city's ordinance regulating marijuana goes against the will of state voters who approved medical marijuana at the polls in 2008. The initiative was passed by 63 percent of voters state-wide and by 59 percent of voters in the city of Wyoming. Last year, City Council members said they plan to keep marijuana growers out of Wyoming and would take the case to the State Supreme Court, if necessary. Council members initiated the ban, saying marijuana can be distributed safely by pharmacists, not by licensed marijuana caregivers as Michigan law allows. TerBeek, who is a registered medical marijuana license holder, said the ordinance regulates where the marijuana can be sold and, as it turns out, there is nowhere in the city that qualifies. TerBeek filed the lawsuit against the city where Leiber ruled in favor of the city. TerBeek said Leiber acted less like a judge and more like a prosecutor enforcing the city's ordinance. "They have tried to cloak a marijuana ban in a city ordinance," TerBeek said today. The three-judge appeals court panel ruled unanimously that the city ordinance conflicts with the state's Medical Marijuana Act. It rejected the city's argument that the state law contradicts a federal ban on marijuana, which is listed as a class one controlled substance. "The (federal drug law) provisions do not preempt the MMMA's grant of immunity as found (the Medical Marijuana Act) because it is well established that Congress cannot require the states to enforce federal law," the court wrote. "Thus, while Congress can criminalize all uses of medical marijuana, it cannot require the states to do the same. Accordingly, Michigan is not required to criminalize all uses of medical marijuana and the immunity afforded to the medical use of marijuana by (state law)." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt