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65A - RPT - REGARDING MEDICAL MARIJUANA INITIATIVE
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65A - RPT - REGARDING MEDICAL MARIJUANA INITIATIVE
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Last modified
4/6/2017 4:28:57 PM
Creation date
3/14/2013 4:00:37 PM
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City Clerk
Doc Type
Agenda Packet
Agency
Planning & Building
Item #
65A
Date
3/18/2013
Destruction Year
2018
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CALIFORNIA LAW <br />Although California law generally prohibits the cultivation, possession, transportation, sale, or other <br />transfer of marijuana from one person to another, since late 1996 after passage of an initiative <br />(Proposition 215) later codified as the Compassionate Use Act, it has provided a limited affirmative <br />defense to criminal prosecution for those who cultivate, possess, or use limited amounts of marijuana <br />for medicinal purposes as qualified patients with a physician's recommendation or their designated <br />primary caregiver or cooperative. Notwithstanding these limited exceptions to criminal culpability, <br />California law is notably silent on any such available defense for a storefront marijuana dispensary, <br />and California Attorney General Edmund G. Brown, Jr. has recently issued guidelines that generally <br />find marijuana dispensaries to be unprotected and illegal drug-trafficking enterprises except in the <br />rare instance that one can qualify as a true cooperative under California law. A primary caregiver <br />must consistently and regularly assume responsibility for the housing, health, or safety of an <br />authorized medical marijuana user, and nowhere does California law authorize cultivating or <br />providing marijuana-medical or non-medical-for profit. <br />California's Medical Marijuana Program Act (Senate Bill 420) provides further guidelines for <br />mandated county programs for the issuance of identification cards to authorized medical marijuana <br />users on a voluntary basis, for the chief purpose of giving them a means of certification to show law <br />enforcement officers if such persons are investigated for an offense involving marijuana. This <br />system is currently under challenge by the Counties of San Bernardino and San Diego and Sheriff <br />Gary Penrod, pending a decision on review by the U.S. Supreme Court, as is California's right to <br />permit any legal use of marijuana in light of federal law that totally prohibits any personal <br />cultivation, possession, sale, transportation, or use of this substance whatsoever, whether for medical <br />or non-medical purposes. <br />PROBLEMS POSED BY MARIJUANA DISPENSARIES <br />Marijuana dispensaries are commonly large money-making enterprises that will sell marijuana to <br />most anyone who produces a physician's written recommendation for its medical use. These <br />recommendations can be had by paying unscrupulous physicians a fee and claiming to have most <br />any malady, even headaches. While the dispensaries will claim to receive only donations, no <br />marijuana will change hands without an exchange of money. These operations have been tied to <br />organized criminal gangs, foster large grow operations, and are often multi-million-dollar profit <br />centers. <br />Because they are repositories of valuable marijuana crops and large amounts of cash, several <br />operators of dispensaries have been attacked and murdered by armed robbers both at their storefronts <br />and homes, and such places have been regularly burglarized. Drug dealing, sales to minors, <br />loitering, heavy vehicle and foot traffic in retail areas, increased noise, and robberies of customers <br />just outside dispensaries are also common ancillary byproducts of their operations. To repel store <br />invasions, firearms are often kept on hand inside dispensaries, and firearms are used to hold up their <br />proprietors. These dispensaries are either linked to large marijuana grow operations or encourage <br />home grows by buying marijuana to dispense. And, just as destructive fires and unhealthful mold in <br />residential neighborhoods are often the result of large indoor home grows designed to supply <br />dispensaries, money laundering also naturally results from dispensaries' likely unlawful operations. <br />© 2009 California Police Chiefs Assn. V All Rights Reserved <br />65A-60
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