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Alaska Courts Clear Past Cannabis Convictions From State Database

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Cannabis Now reports

The Alaska Supreme Court will clear the records of about 750 cannabis convictions from a state database in a move to help protect past offenders from the negative impact of a criminal record for conduct that’s no longer against the law. Under an order signed by the court’s five justices in January, records of past marijuana offenses will be removed from Courtview, the state’s online database of court cases, on May 1.

The court’s action continues the push to expunge convictions for cannabis-related offenses in states that have legalized marijuana in an attempt to mitigate the harms caused by years of cannabis prohibition and the War on Drugs. The order applies to cases in which the defendant was at least 21 years old, and possession of up to one ounce of cannabis was the only charge.

Legislative attempts by lawmakers to remove cannabis convictions from Courtview have so far been unsuccessful, although bills are pending for the current legislative session. The action by the Supreme Court largely accomplishes the goal, but the new policy doesn’t remove the records of cannabis-related convictions from all state databases. Attorney Jana Weltzin said the move is a positive development for cannabis policy reform efforts in Alaska.

“If you’re older than 21 and you violated simple marijuana possession—meaning marijuana under an ounce—and you had it on your person, and it’s not connected with any other crime, then the Supreme Court of Alaska says we’re removing those from Courtview,” Weltzin told local media.

Nancy Meade, general counsel for the Alaska Court System, said that the change originated with administrative staff and was considered by the justices through the Supreme Court’s normal procedures.

“Given that (cannabis) has been legal for eight years, it appeared to the Supreme Court that this was an appropriate time not to have people, as I say, suffer the negative consequences that can stem from having your name posted on Courtview,” Meade said in a statement quoted by the Alaska Beacon. “Because the conduct is considered legal right now,” she said.

Court’s Order Doesn’t Affect All Conviction Records

The decision by the Supreme Court doesn’t expunge past cannabis convictions from the state’s criminal records, which are maintained by the Alaska Department of Public Safety (DPS). Officials clarified that information on such convictions would still be available at courthouses for inspection by members of the public and through formal background checks.

“The court system isn’t the official criminal record repository for the state of Alaska,” Meade said.

Records of arrests and convictions can have an impact on the ability of past offenders to secure employment and housing. But past legislative efforts to remove cannabis conviction records from Courtview haven’t been approved by lawmakers.

“A lot of folks in my district, they have these barriers that are put in place, and a simple rule change, policy change, legislation, could change it for their entire lives,” said Republican state Rep. Stanley Wright.

Last year, the Alaska House of Representatives approved a bill to conceal cannabis convictions from Courtview and criminal background searches by a vote of 30-8. The state Senate, however, failed to pass the bill before the end of the 2022 legislative session. A similar bill to shield cannabis convictions was pre-filed for the 2023 session by Wright on January 19, less than two weeks before the Supreme Court’s decision to remove the records from Courtview. Forrest Wolfe, Wright’s chief of staff, said that shielding the records of cannabis convictions can help mitigate the exodus of working-age people in Alaska that has in part led to a labor shortage in the state.

“It’s all about reducing barriers to entry, especially for employment,” Wolfe said. “In Alaska, we have a huge workforce shortage. If you were 21 years old or older, and it was some sort of a nonviolent crime, you were charged with and convicted of, now that cannabis is legal in the state, we don’t think it should be reflected negatively on your record,” Wolfe added.

Wright is reportedly considering whether his bill, which already has bipartisan support from three Democrats and two independent lawmakers, is still needed after the Supreme Court order to remove cannabis convictions from Courtview, while Democratic Sen. Löki Tobin is reportedly considering introducing a similar bill. Unlike the Supreme Court’s policy, which only covers court records, more comprehensive legislation could also protect information on cannabis convictions from being released through criminal background checks. If Wright’s bill is passed, up to 8,500 past cannabis convictions could be affected and hidden from view, according to information from the DPS.

The Alaska Supreme Court has a history of handing down decisions that have protected the rights of cannabis users. In 1975, the court ruled that the right to privacy guaranteed in the Alaska Constitution protects the possession and use of small amounts of marijuana in private residences, effectively legalizing cannabis for personal use.

Alaska Courts Clear Past Cannabis Convictions From State Database



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Oklahoma woman can’t be tried for legal use of marijuana while pregnant, court rules

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OPINION

ROWLAND, PRESIDING JUDGE:

¶1 The State of Oklahoma appeals a pretrial order quashing the Information against Appellee Aguilar for insufficient evidence. The State charged Aguilar by Information in the District Court of Kay County, Case No. CF-2020-634, with one count of child neglect in violation of 21 O.S.Supp.2019, § 843.5(C). After being bound over for trial at preliminary hearing, she filed a motion to quash for insufficient evidence pursuant to 22 O.S.2021, § 504.1. The Honorable Lee Turner, District Judge, granted the motion and quashed the Information. The State now appeals, pursuant to 22 O.S.Supp.2022, § 1053(4), and raises the following propositions of error:

I. whether the district court erred in granting Aguilar’s motion to quash for insufficient evidence when it found that her use of medical marijuana while pregnant is not illegal under Oklahoma law; and

II. whether the district court erred in finding that the out of state lab report should not have been admitted at preliminary hearing.

¶2 After thorough consideration of the entire record before us on appeal, including the original record, transcripts, exhibits and the parties’ briefs, we find that no relief is required under the law and evidence. The district court’s order granting Aguilar’s motion to quash is affirmed.

I.

¶3 The issue in this appeal is whether an expectant mother who holds a medical marijuana card and uses the drug while pregnant has exposed her unborn child to illegal drugs constituting the crime of child neglect, which in Oklahoma includes “the failure or omission to protect a child from exposure to ․ the use, possession, sale, or manufacture of illegal drugs.” 10A O.S.Supp.2019, § 1-1-105(48)(b)(1) (emphasis added). The Information charges Aguilar with a single felony count of child neglect by “exposing J.W.B. to controlled dangerous substances in utero, specifically Marijuana.” (Emphasis added). Thus, the charging document accuses Aguilar of a crime which does not exist, i.e., child neglect by exposure to “controlled dangerous substances” as opposed to exposure to “illegal drugs[.]” This is not a matter of semantics, and although this charging error does not determine the outcome of this appeal, the apparent confusion in terminology and definitions which led to that error is central to understanding how to properly resolve this case.

¶4 The terms “controlled dangerous substance” and “illegal drugs” are not synonymous; the former includes hundreds of prescription drugs which, like marijuana, are lawful to possess only with a prescription or other legal authorization. The term “controlled dangerous substance” is defined in 63 O.S.Supp.2019, § 2-101(8) as any drug listed in any of the Schedules I through V of the Uniform Controlled Substances Act. However, neither that Act nor any other provision of Oklahoma law defines the term “illegal drug”, so we must ascertain the meaning of that term, and specifically, whether the marijuana use in this case is included within it so as to constitute child neglect.

¶5 In general, drugs in Schedules II through V have potential for abuse, but also some legitimate medical value and can be lawfully prescribed by a practitioner. Those in Schedule I have high potential for abuse but no legitimate medical value, and because of this historically could not be prescribed by a practitioner. This clear distinction between Schedule I versus all other Schedules was blurred when Oklahoma enacted its medical marijuana laws, leaving marijuana in Schedule I but creating a licensing procedure authorizing its lawful possession and use. Thus, while every other drug listed in Schedule I is likely an “illegal drug” as that term is used in the child neglect statute, marijuana may or may not be, depending upon whether the particular user has a medical marijuana card. It is undisputed that Aguilar had one.

¶6 We find that the most logical reading of 10A O.S.Supp.2019, § 1-1-105(48)(b)(1) is that “illegal drugs” means those drugs whose possession or use violated the law at the time of that possession or use. Hence, an expectant mother who exposes her unborn child to illegal methamphetamine could be convicted of child neglect. See State v. Green, 2020 OK CR 18, 474 P.3d 886. Conversely, under that definition, an expectant mother’s licensed possession and use of medical marijuana would not trigger an automatic finding of neglect for failure to protect her unborn child from exposure to illegal drugs because as to her, marijuana is not an illegal drug.

¶7 Judge Lumpkin’s dissent points out that Aguilar’s unborn child did not have a medical marijuana license and thus it became an illegal drug as soon as it crossed the placental barrier from the mother. This attempt to get to a desirable result in this case proves too much, because every drug in Schedules II through V, lawfully prescribed to an expectant mother, would subject her to prosecution for child neglect as soon as a molecule of such drug entered the body of her unborn child. All of these drugs are illegal to possess or use without a prescription. Like it or not, in Oklahoma, marijuana, like all of these other controlled substances, may now be either a legal or an illegal drug, depending upon whether the person has legal authorization to possess and use it. His dissent terms today’s ruling “devoid of common sense” but he would craft a legal rule which turns on an unborn fetus not having a medical marijuana card, and which makes it unlawful for any expectant mother to ever be prescribed any controlled dangerous substance by any doctor. While we understand his obvious desire to discourage marijuana use by pregnant women, judicial restraint requires that we defer to the Legislature to address the problem. “[I]t is not our place to interpret a statute to address a matter the Legislature chose not to address, even if we think that interpretation might produce a reasonable result. We will not enlarge the meaning of words included in a statute to create a crime not defined by that statute.” State v. Young, 1999 OK CR 14, ¶ 27, 989 P.2d 949, 955.

¶8 In the other dissent, Judge Lewis opines that neither the voters nor the legislature intended to legalize prenatal exposure to marijuana when they passed the medical marijuana laws. He is very likely correct, and we certainly do not condone marijuana use by an expectant mother. But, as explained above, when Oklahoma’s laws were changed to exempt this drug from the alwaysillegal category of Schedule I, it became a legal drug for certain persons including Aguilar. For us to find that Aguilar’s marijuana use, fully authorized by her medical marijuana card, became illegal due to her pregnancy, would require us to rewrite the statutes in a way we simply do not think is appropriate for courts to do. We urge the Legislature to consider an addition to the law making clear when, if ever, the licensed use of marijuana may constitute child neglect under 10A O.S.Supp.2019, § 1-1-105(48)(b)(1). Accordingly, Proposition I is denied.

II.

¶9 Because we find that Judge Turner was correct in holding that Aguilar’s conduct did not violate 10A O.S.Supp.2019, § 1-1-105(48)(b)(1), Proposition II is moot.

DECISION

¶10 The district court’s order granting the motion to quash for insufficient evidence after preliminary hearing is AFFIRMED. Pursuant to Rule 3.15, Rules of the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals, Title 22, Ch. 18, App. (2024), the MANDATE is ORDERED issued upon delivery and filing of this decision.

AN APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF KAY COUNTY THE HONORABLE LEE TURNER, DISTRICT JUDGE

¶1 I dissent to the resolution in this case. This is an appeal of a District Court ruling on a motion to quash. “The standard of review to be used by the reviewing District Court Judge in a State appeal from an adverse ruling of the preliminary hearing magistrate is ‘whether the evidence, taken in the light most favorable to the state, is sufficient to find that a felony crime has been committed and that the defendant probably committed said crime.’” State v. Bradley, 2018 OK CR 34, ¶ 12, 434 P.3d 5, 9 (quoting 22 O.S.2011, § 1089.5). See also State v. Yarbrough, S-2019-947, November 12, 2020, unpublished (magistrate bound over Appellee for trial on child neglect charges; she filed motion to quash, alleging insufficient evidence and district court granted motion. This Court restated and used the above standard of review from Bradley in reversing the case). The District Court must also consider the presumption that the State will strengthen its case at trial in reaching its decision on a motion to quash for insufficient evidence. Kennedy v. State, 1992 OK CR 67, ¶ 9, 839 P.2d 667, 670. Absent a showing that the magistrate abused his or her discretion, the District Court must affirm the magistrate’s ruling. Bradley, 2018 OK CR 34, ¶ 12, 434 P.3d at 10. An abuse of discretion is a clearly erroneous conclusion and judgment, one that is clearly against the logic and effect of the facts presented or, stated otherwise, any unreasonable or arbitrary action taken without proper consideration of the facts and law pertaining to the matter at issue. Neloms v. State, 2012 OK CR 7, ¶ 35, 274 P.3d 161, 170 (internal citation and quotation marks omitted).

¶2 The Information in this case charged Appellee with the crime of child neglect under 21 O.S.Supp.2019, § 843.5(C) by exposing her child in utero to “controlled dangerous substances”, specifically marijuana. The child neglect statute criminalizes exposure of a child to “illegal drugs”, but that term is not defined in the statute. See 10A O.S.Supp.2019, § 1-1-105(48)(b)(1). In 63 O.S.Supp.2019, § 2-101(8), “controlled dangerous substances” is defined as any drug listed in any of the Schedules I-V of the Uniform Controlled Substances Act.1

¶3 At preliminary hearing, the state presented evidence sufficient to bind Appellee over on the charged crime. Appellee’s DHS worker testified Appellee admitted to her that she used marijuana during her pregnancy. The State also admitted the lab report, which showed the baby’s meconium tested positive for the presence of marijuana after birth, as part of the baby’s medical records.

¶4 The District Court granted Appellee’s motion to quash based upon its findings that marijuana was not an illegal drug for Appellee (she had a medical marijuana license) and that the lab report was improperly admitted pursuant to 22 O.S.2021, § 751(A)(3), a statute which authorizes admission of certain self-authenticated reports without the necessity of calling a sponsoring witness. This was an abuse of discretion.

¶5 The opinion finds drugs listed in Schedule I “have high potential for abuse but no legitimate medical value” and could not be prescribed by a medical practitioner. On the other hand, drugs listed in Schedules II-V, while having the potential for abuse, also have certain legitimate medical value and can be lawfully prescribed by a medical practitioner. The problem is that despite the legalization of medical marijuana, marijuana is still listed as a Schedule I drug. Its use may or may not be illegal depending upon whether the user has a medical marijuana card. Appellee has such a card.

¶6 The opinion determines that the term, “illegal drugs”, as used in the child neglect statute means those whose possession or use violated the law at the time of the possession or use, such as methamphetamine. Under that definition, the opinion finds Appellee’s licensed possession and use of medical marijuana would not lead to a finding of neglect for failure to protect her unborn baby from exposure to possession or use of illegal drugs because as to her, marijuana is not an illegal drug. Thus, Appellee’s use of marijuana did not become illegal due to her pregnancy. This analysis is devoid of common sense as the drug is still an illegal and unlawful drug. Only Appellee has a permit to use it, not her baby.

¶7 This finding strains a gnat’s hair to disregard the status of the unborn baby. Our statutes provide penalties for actions adversely affecting unborn children. For example, our homicide statutes provide that one who kills a pregnant woman, resulting in not only her death, but also in the death of her unborn child, is subject to a criminal charge for both the woman and her child. See 21 O.S.2021, § 701.7 (first degree murder); 21 O.S.2021, § 701.8 (second degree murder); 21 O.S.2021, § 711 (first degree manslaughter); 21 O.S.2021, § 716 (second degree manslaughter); 21 O.S.2021, § 723 (there is no requirement that a perpetrator have knowledge or should have knowledge that the victim of the underlying offense was pregnant or that he or she intended to cause death or bodily injury to the unborn child).

¶8 In keeping with the above statutes, this Court holds that an unborn baby is a child for purposes of child neglect. The child neglect statutes were undoubtedly enacted to protect children from harm. Marijuana is still an illegal Schedule I drug except for a person who holds a medical marijuana license. In this case, the baby’s exposure to Appellee’s use and possession of marijuana, a Schedule I drug, is illegal because the baby has no medical marijuana license. It is not the mother’s use or possession of marijuana that is criminalized by the child neglect statute, but her exposure of her unborn child to the use or possession of marijuana, an illegal drug for the child.2 Thus, the District Court abused its discretion in granting the motion to quash based on its finding that marijuana was not an illegal drug for Appellee. ¶9 The opinion argues if we reverse this case, then any Schedule II -V drug (illegal to possess or use without a prescription) prescribed to a pregnant woman subjects her to criminal liability for child neglect once she ingests it. What this argument fails to recognize is that the other Schedule II-V drugs are prescribed by physicians who monitor their patients who are taking the prescribed drugs. With licensed medical marijuana there is zero physician monitoring of the person’s use of the drug.

¶10 As for the lab report, Section 751(A)(3) is only a statute authorizing admission of certain self-authenticated reports without the necessity of calling a sponsoring witness. It does not determine what is or is not admissible. The lab report in this case was not testimonial as the lab test was ordered by the hospital (not by the prosecution) as part of its regular procedures in providing medical care. It would properly be admitted if: an appropriate foundation is laid with a witness; or sufficient evidence is presented to qualify it as a business record exception to the hearsay prohibition pursuant to 12 O.S.2021, § 2803(6) (the report was requested by the hospital and included in the baby’s medical records from the hospital).3 There is no constitutional issue regarding the report’s admission.

¶11 Under the Bradley standard, the District Court abused its discretion in granting the motion to quash as it failed to consider the balance of evidence that is sufficient for a bind over and it failed to consider that the State would strengthen its case at trial. Having determined the District Court abused its discretion in granting the motion to quash, I dissent.

¶1 I respectfully dissent. The State’s burden at preliminary examination was to show probable cause that Appellee committed child neglect. Child neglect is the willful or malicious failure or omission by a person responsible for a child’s health, safety, or welfare, to protect a child under 18 from exposure to the use, possession, sale, or manufacture of illegal drugs. See 21 O.S.Supp.2019, § 843.5(C) and 21 O.S.Supp.2022, § 843.5(O)(2) (using neglect definition in 10A O.S., § 1-1-105); 10A O.S.Supp.2022, § 1-1-105 (49)(a)(2)(a)(defining “neglect”).

¶2 The trial court’s decision was assuredly not based on the lack of convincing evidence that Appellee smoked marijuana while pregnant and thus exposed an unborn child to her use of that drug. She admitted it, and the child’s postnatal meconium test confirmed the presence of THC. Rather it was the trial court’s conclusion that Appellee’s exposure of the unborn child to her use of marijuana could not be “illegal” due to her possession of a state-issued medical marijuana license. This was error.

¶3 Oklahoma law prohibits the unlicensed use or possession of marijuana by minors,4 with an exception for children who obtain a medical license approved by two physicians. 63 O.S.Supp.2017, § 2-402(B)(2); 63 O.S.Supp.2019, § 420(L). Moreover, a medical marijuana license is certainly not a legal authorization to share, transfer, or distribute marijuana to others who have no license, especially those for whom its use or possession is unauthorized by law.

¶4 Appellee is not charged with using marijuana under her state-issued license, which is no crime; but rather with conduct exceeding the bounds of her personal license by exposing an unborn child to marijuana. And until today, who could really doubt that a licensed marijuana consumer would face legal consequences for willfully sharing, distributing, or permitting the unlicensed ingestion of marijuana by children for whose welfare they are responsible?

¶5 The untenable result that follows from the majority’s logic is the outright dismissal of a neglect charge based on a mother’s uncontested prenatal exposure of her child to marijuana. The majority seems to concede that this result would surprise both the voters who adopted the medical marijuana law and the legislators who have kept the law largely in effect. It certainly surprises me.

¶6 The State must yet convince a jury or trial judge that its evidence warrants a conviction of neglect. But the State is not required at preliminary examination to prove guilt. State v. Heath, 2011 OK CR 5, ¶ 7, 246 P.3d 723, 725. Evidence that coincides with guilt and is inconsistent with innocence is sufficient. State v. Davis, 1991 OK CR 123, ¶ 7, 823 P.2d 367, 369.

¶7 The State presented ample evidence that Appellee exposed her child to marijuana in utero. Appellee’s marijuana card did not license this conduct, and the trial court erred by granting the motion to quash. Because neither the People nor the Oklahoma Legislature intended to legalize child neglect in the form of marijuana exposure by their enactment of medical marijuana laws, I respectfully dissent.

¶1 I concur in today’s decision. Right or wrong, Aguilar cannot be prosecuted for child neglect for prenatally exposing her infant to marijuana. While there may be circumstances in which a woman’s legal use of marijuana while pregnant may amount to child abuse, that is not the case before us today. See 21 O.S.2021, § 843.5(O)(1). Nor is that issue clear given the broad protections provided in the Oklahoma Medical Marijuana and Protection Act. See 63 O.S.Supp.2019, § 427.8(F) (“A medical marijuana patient ․ shall not be subject to arrest, prosecution or penalty in any manner ․ for the medical use of marijuana in accordance with this act.”). While the extent of that protection may be unwise, it is not this Court’s function to legislate. I thus write specially to stress the need for legislative clarification.

Citationizer© Summary of Documents Citing This Document

Cite Name Level None Found. Citationizer: Table of Authority Cite Name Level Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals Cases Cite Name Level 1991 OK CR 123, 823 P.2d 367, STATE v. DAVIS Discussed 1992 OK CR 67, 839 P.2d 667, KENNEDY v. STATE Discussed 2006 OK CR 31, 140 P.3d 557, STATE v. FRANKS Discussed 2009 OK CR 4, 203 P.3d 179, HAMPTON v. STATE Discussed 2011 OK CR 5, 246 P.3d 723, STATE v. HEATH Discussed 2012 OK CR 7, 274 P.3d 161, NELOMS v. STATE Discussed 2018 OK CR 34, 434 P.3d 5, STATE v. BRADLEY; STATE v. BRODIE Discussed at Length 2020 OK CR 18, 474 P.3d 886, STATE v. GREEN Discussed at Length 1999 OK CR 14, 989 P.2d 949, 70 State v. Young OBJ 1076, Discussed Cite Name Level Title 12. Civil Procedure Cite Name Level 12 O.S. 2803, Hearsay Exceptions – Availability of Declarant Immaterial Cited Title 21. Crimes and Punishments Cite Name Level 21 O.S. 723, Proof of Knowledge of Pregnancy of Victim or Intent to Harm Unborn Cited Child Not Required 21 O.S. 843.5, Abuse, Neglect, Exploitation, or Sexual Abuse of Child – Penalties – Discussed at Length Definitions 21 O.S. 701.7, Murder in the First Degree Cited 21 O.S. 701.8, Second Degree Murder Cited 21 O.S. 711, First Degree Manslaughter Cited 21 O.S. 716, Second Degree Manslaughter Cited Title 22. Criminal Procedure Cite Name Level 22 O.S. 751, Admission of Laboratory Findings – State Bureau of Investigation – Cited Federal Bureau of Investigation – Drug Enforcement Administration 22 O.S. 504.1, Motion to Quash for Insufficient Evidence Cited 22 O.S. 1053, State or Municipality May Appeal in What Cases Cited 22 O.S. 1089.5, Appeal by State of Preliminary Ruling – Standard for Review Cited Title 63. Public Health and Safety Cite Name Level 63 O.S. 2-101, Definitions Discussed 63 O.S. 2-402, Prohibited Acts B – Penalties Cited 63 O.S. 427.1, Short Title Cited

FOOTNOTES

1.   The elements of the crime of child neglect as charged here are: First, a person responsible for the child’s health, safety, or welfare; Second, willfully/maliciously; Third, failed/omitted to protect; Fourth, a child under the age of eighteen from exposure to; Fifth, the use/possession of illegal drugs. Instruction No. 4-37, OUJI-CR (2d).

2.   The Medical Marijuana and Patient Protection Act, 63 O.S.Supp.2019, §§ 427.1, et. seq., specifically Section 427.6(H)(1), provides that a first offense for “intentional and impermissible diversion of medical marijuana. . . by a patient or caregiver to an unauthorized person shall not be punished under a criminal statute but may be subject to a fine of Two Hundred ($200.00).” However, the child neglect statute is the controlling one in that it specifically prohibits exposure of a minor child to illegal drugs. See State v. Franks, 2006 OK CR 31, ¶ 6, 140 P.3d 557, 559 (“specific statutes control [over] general ones”).

3.   In Hampton v. State, 2009 OK CR 4, ¶ 18, 203 P.3d 179, 185, we held “the substantial trustworthiness test is a procedure upon which Oklahoma trial judges may rely in deciding when hearsay evidence can be considered over an objection to a probationer’s right of confrontation [in a revocation proceeding].” Given the similar lesser burden of proof operative in a preliminary hearing, the substantial trustworthiness test could provide for admission of certain business records without the testimony or certification required by Section 2803(6).

4.   An unborn human offspring is a child, and thus a minor child, within the protection of the child neglect statutes. State v. Green, 2020 OK CR 18, ¶ 12, 474 P.3d 886, 891.

OPINION BY: ROWLAND, P.J.

MUSSEMAN, V.P.J.: Concur LUMPKIN, J.: Dissent LEWIS, J.: Dissent HUDSON, J.: Specially Concur



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Troutman Pepper Publish Their July Issue of Their Monthly Cannabis Newsletter

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Navigating the New Legal Landscape: The Impact of Loper Bright on Federal Marijuana Rescheduling

By Jean Smith-Gonnell and Dascher Pasco

The federal rescheduling of marijuana has been a topic of conversation within the marijuana industry since President Biden’s statement requesting that the secretary of health and human services (HHS) and the attorney general (AG) “initiate the administrative process to review expeditiously how marijuana is scheduled under federal law.”[1] However, the Supreme Court’s recent decision overturning the Chevron doctrine adds an additional layer to an already complicated process. While the exact impact of Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo[2] on the cannabis industry remains to be seen, this article explores the way in which it may impact the pending rescheduling.

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Rescheduling and Recreational Marijuana: Possible Step Toward National Legalization?

By Jean Smith-Gonnell and Michael Lafleur

Published in Reuters on July 2, 2024.

On May 16, 2024, the Department of Justice (DOJ) issued its Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) related to the transfer of marijuana from schedule I of the Controlled Substances Act (CSA) to schedule III, consistent with the recommendation provided by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) in August 2023. The CSA requires that rescheduling must be accomplished through a formal rulemaking process and public comment starting 60 days from the date of publication in the Federal Register.

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The Path and Politics of Marijuana Legislation: State-by-State Progress and Future Directions

By Jean Smith-Gonnell and Gina Hitchman*

I. Today’s Marijuana Landscape

Despite marijuana’s continued federal classification as a Schedule I controlled substance,[1] 26 states and the District of Columbia have passed laws at least partially decriminalizing marijuana possession and recreational use.[2] A majority of Americans now live in states where marijuana is legal for recreational use,[3] and nearly three-quarters of Americans live in states that have legalized marijuana for either recreational or medical sales and use.[4] Currently, 14 states have only legalized medical use,[5] while 24 states and the District of Columbia have implemented regulatory schemes for both medical and recreational use.[6] Of the remaining 12 states where marijuana is still illegal, possession is decriminalized in two states.[7] The map below illustrates these categories.[8]

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New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Department revokes licenses at two Torrance County cannabis farms

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New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Department revokes licenses at two Torrance County cannabis farms



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