Medical Pot In Oakland: Appeals Court Weighs Fate Of 'Superstore'

Jacob Redmond

Well-Known Member
Even with dozens of states such as California now allowing the sale of medical marijuana and a handful of others legalizing weed altogether, Oakland's Harborside Health Center, the nation's largest medicinal cannabis dispensary, is still locked in a legal fight for survival with the federal government.

On Tuesday, Harborside's two-year standoff with the U.S. Justice Department reaches a federal appeals court, which is set to consider Oakland's novel legal move to block the government's seizure of the dispensary through forfeiture laws.

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals is reviewing a 2013 lower court ruling tossing out Oakland's lawsuit, which argues that a federal government shutdown of one of four city-approved and regulated medical marijuana outfits harms the city's interests.

Despite that ruling, U.S. Magistrate Judge Maria Elena James has put the government's forfeiture case against Harborside on hold while the appeals court reviews the issues -- a move that has allowed the dispensary to continue to sell medical pot to patients in Oakland, as well as its smaller facility in San Jose.

Legal experts say Oakland may have a tough sell with the appeals court, given the government's sweeping powers under federal drug laws. The government moved to shutter the East Oakland dispensary, labeled a medical pot "superstore," because it is so large that it was alleged likely to sell to customers who could not prove a medical need.

"The city of Oakland has a really difficult, uphill battle here," said former federal prosecutor Rory Little, a Hastings College of the Law professor.

Nevertheless, while the case may mark a crucial stage in Harborside's attempt to stave off closing an operation that generates more than $20 million a year in business, it may not be the final word. Even if the 9th Circuit sides with the government, Harborside may lose a battle but win the war.

In a recent development, Congress included a provision in December spending legislation -- signed by President Barack Obama -- that appears to bar the federal government from using resources to prosecute medical marijuana providers in the 32 states where it is legal.

U.S. Attorney Melinda Haag, who filed the forfeiture action against Harborside, declined to comment on the case. And U.S. Justice Department officials, who are defending the government against Oakland's lawsuit in the 9th Circuit, have not addressed how the legislation affects situations such as Harborside.

But Harborside's supporters are using the legislation to back Oakland's arguments, telling the 9th Circuit in court papers that the congressional action "reaffirms the government's policy of non-prosecution of persons acting in compliance with state and municipal laws regarding medical marijuana."

Steve DeAngelo, Harborside's co-founder, could not be reached for comment, but he has vowed repeatedly to fight to keep his doors open to medical marijuana patients. He has Oakland's strong support, as city officials maintain keeping it operating is important for everything from tax revenue to alleviating black market pot sales on city streets.

"The government's position on medical marijuana is schizophrenic," said Cedric Chao, the lawyer representing Oakland. "The whole case makes the government uncomfortable."

The Obama administration, at the direction of Attorney General Eric Holder, in recent years shifted course on medical marijuana enforcement, for the most part abandoning prosecution in states where medical weed is legal. California voters approved medical pot in 1996.

But there have been some crackdowns, primarily aimed at dispensaries proliferating without much oversight in areas such as near schools and parks. The Harborside action, filed two years ago, came before some of the more recent shifts in Justice Department enforcement.

Government lawyers, however, still argue that Oakland has no legal basis to block the Harborside forfeiture and interfere with enforcement of federal drug laws. "The city cannot plausibly claim to be in the zone of interests protected by the federal law at issue here," Justice Department lawyers told the 9th Circuit.

Oakland concedes the city's argument is unique -- but insists that Harborside's situation is likewise unique.

"Oakland is clearly harmed," Chao said.

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California voters may have passed a petition to allow #MedMj in California a-way back in '96, but there was no formal, legal infrastructure set up to regulate the distribution of #MedMj buds and wax in the State of California.

Basically, its still a wild and wooly western movie in California with regards to #cannabuds.

There is no central California regulative authority overseeing the creation of #MedMj dispensaries vs #RecMj dispensaries in California.

The voters of California voted that out in the #2012 election.

Could have had a legal framework set up to guide the judges via voter petition, but voters complicent with the open growers of northern California blockaded that initiative.

So, stuck with the wild n wooly, and the interpretations of the various judges, the Federal government, under Prez O'bama's directive, presumes super-large Cannabis dispensaries to be outlets of highly probable "leakage" in California.

And, "Leakage" ... as was the case in '36 when Prez F Roosevelt decided to regulate the wheat market to support price coming out of the Great Depression ... is what our past Federal Supreme Court judges have decided to be THE most important factor in the modern day regulation of #cannabuds and other hemp related products.

NOT the welfare of the people suffering from a myriad of cancers in the USA (1,500 deaths per day!).

No ... that would require access to Cannabis as a patent medicine, not simply as a folk remedy.

This case belongs elevated to the California Supreme Court, with certiari granted, to then be elevated to the Federal Supreme Court once again, in the absence of a legal framework constructed in California via the #2016 initiative.

The voters of California have the decision to make, not the judges.

Do we want Harborside Health Care to be the world's pre-eminent venue for the distribution of #cannabuds?

Or, do we want Harborside Health Care shut down because we refuse to place a legal framework over our billion dollar market for #cannabuds production, distribution, and consumption?

Prez O'bama is waiting to see, and in the interim, he and his Federal agents are poised to pounce, in the event Cali does not come to terms with the current wild and wooly western outlook of the regulation, distribution, and consumption of #cannabuds derived products.

In the interim, Harborside Health Care, its employees, its customers, its vendors, and its founder Steve-O live each day in legal limbo with a Haig sword of Damocles continuing to hover over their heads.

RH
 
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