News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: MMJ: Firm Loses Appeal to Sell Marijuana |
Title: | US CA: MMJ: Firm Loses Appeal to Sell Marijuana |
Published On: | 1999-07-16 |
Source: | Los Angeles Times (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-06 01:57:35 |
Firm Loses Appeal to Sell Marijuana
An Appellate Judge Has Affirmed A Lower Court's Decision To Prevent
Marijuana Sales By A Thousand Oaks Business
Rainbow Country sold marijuana under the auspices of Proposition 215, but
was shut down after a judge ruled earlier this year that the business was
illegal, the district attorney's office said Thursday.
Business owner Andrea Nagy and her assistant Robert Carson appealed. But
Judge William Peck affirmed the March decision.
"Any financial harm [Nagy] may suffer is outweighed by the concerns of the
state in protecting its citizens from alleged illegal drug sales," said the
Court of Appeals decision.
But the injunction issued in the March decision does not inhibit the lawful
medicinal use of marijuana by legitimate patients, the appeals court found.
While Proposition 215 permits seriously ill patients with a physician's
recommendation or approval to cultivate and possess marijuana for medicinal
use, it does not authorize establishing marijuana pharmacies, like Rainbow
Country, according to a statement released by the Ventura County district
attorney's office.
The proposition, passed by voters in November 1996, also prohibits
supplying medicinal marijuana unless there is a bona fide primary caregiver
relationship between the patient and provider.
"While I am pleased with this decision to enjoin a marijuana distribution
center, I believe this proposition can be lawfully implemented for
individuals who are seriously ill," said Dist. Atty. Michael D. Bradbury.
An Appellate Judge Has Affirmed A Lower Court's Decision To Prevent
Marijuana Sales By A Thousand Oaks Business
Rainbow Country sold marijuana under the auspices of Proposition 215, but
was shut down after a judge ruled earlier this year that the business was
illegal, the district attorney's office said Thursday.
Business owner Andrea Nagy and her assistant Robert Carson appealed. But
Judge William Peck affirmed the March decision.
"Any financial harm [Nagy] may suffer is outweighed by the concerns of the
state in protecting its citizens from alleged illegal drug sales," said the
Court of Appeals decision.
But the injunction issued in the March decision does not inhibit the lawful
medicinal use of marijuana by legitimate patients, the appeals court found.
While Proposition 215 permits seriously ill patients with a physician's
recommendation or approval to cultivate and possess marijuana for medicinal
use, it does not authorize establishing marijuana pharmacies, like Rainbow
Country, according to a statement released by the Ventura County district
attorney's office.
The proposition, passed by voters in November 1996, also prohibits
supplying medicinal marijuana unless there is a bona fide primary caregiver
relationship between the patient and provider.
"While I am pleased with this decision to enjoin a marijuana distribution
center, I believe this proposition can be lawfully implemented for
individuals who are seriously ill," said Dist. Atty. Michael D. Bradbury.
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