There has been another Michigan court ruling that affects patients in the state. The Michigan Court of Appeals has declared that medical marijuana patients are not immune from arrest for possession of marijuana, if they do not have their state-issued paperwork or registry card with them. That was just part of the ruling in a case involving an Ottawa County man who was using a medical marijuana defense when he was arrested on May 1st of last year in Granville. The three-judge panel said that although the police were perfectly in their right to arrest James Nicholson, he would be immune from prosecution if he presented his medical marijuana paperwork in court. The ruling handed down today says that state-issued medical marijuana registry cards and applications must be “reasonably accessible at the location” of an arrest for an individual to be immune from arrest. Nicholson had verbally informed the officers of his right to possess marijuana for medical reasons. In circuit court, Nicholson produced his state-issued medical marijuana registry card that was dated from March, a few months before his arrest, as evidence that he could possess up to two-and-a-half ounces of marijuana, so the appellate court found he could use it as a defense and sent it back to the lower court. But one judge pointed out that the lower court still has the right to decide whether Nichols was engaged in marijuana usage permitted under the 2008 law.
The appeals judges wrote in the decision that the “Defendant still has one more hurdle to overcome to be entitled to immunity from prosecution; he must also establish that at the time of his arrest he was engaged in the medical use of marijuana in accordance with the (Michigan Medical Marihuana Act).”
Other recent Michigan court rulings include a May Supreme Court decision upholding the right to mount an affirmative defense even without a state issued card, an April Appeals Court ruling that medical marijuana can’t be used as a legal defense for driving while intoxicated, and last August’s Appeals Court decision that medical marijuana dispensaries are illegal under the existing law.
External Links:

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Oregon Joins the List of States Voting to Legalize Marijuana
Michigan Court of Appeals: Defendant Must Prove Marijuana Usage Was Medical
Medical Marijuana Grower In Oregon Convicted on Federal Drug Charges
Medical Marijuana Business in Colorado Can’t File for Bankruptcy
Mother of Teenager Who was Shot by Border Patrol Sues the Agency
Patient Denied a Kidney Transplant Because of Legal Medical Marijuana Use
Another DEA Raid in Sacramento Leaves Dispensary Owners Wondering, “Who is Safe?”
Tommy Chong Battling Cancer
Meghan McCain Supports Legalization
GA Supreme Court Looks at Thermal Imaging Technology
This seems like an invasion of privacy of some kind; I don’t know enough about the arrest though. If the controlled substance you’re in possession of was prescribed to you by a doctor then it should be assumed that your use of it is/will be for medical reasons. If it wasn’t clear at the time of arrest I don’t know how it could be proven he wasn’t using it for medicinal reasons later in court.
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