| Graphic: Potspot 411 |
Vermont on Wednesday joined the growing list of medical marijuana states which have received threatening letters from federal prosecutors regarding state licensing of cannabis dispensaries and grow operations.
| Graphic: Potspot 411 |
Vermont on Wednesday joined the growing list of medical marijuana states which have received threatening letters from federal prosecutors regarding state licensing of cannabis dispensaries and grow operations.
| Graphic: Sensible Washington |
Last week, Governor Christine Gregoire dealt a huge blow to tens of thousands of Washington’s most vulnerable citizens. By vetoing the most useful parts of a medical marijuana bill, the governor shut down an emerging industry that was providing safe access to medicine for cancer and AIDS patients, multiple sclerosis sufferers, and those with severe pain.
| Photo: AnnArbor.com |
| Medical marijuana dispensary owner Chuck Ream holds a sign calling for the firing of Ann Arbor City Attorney Stephen Postema outside city hall last month. Ream has been at odds with Postema over details of the city’s medical marijuana ordinances. |
City council members in Ann Arbor, Michigan have decided they no longer want to have licensing regulations for medical marijuana cultivation facilities.
| Photo: Steve Elliott |
| Bud room at The Healing Center Organization in Seattle |
| Photo: NBC 10 News |
| Governor Lincoln Chafee received a threatening letter today from Rhode Island U.S. Attorney Peter Neronha. |
Add Rhode Island to the list of states that have received threatening letters from the federal government on the issue of medical marijuana in recent weeks.
| Photo: Online Athens |
| Hen-hearted Washington Governor Christine Gregoire: “I cannot take the chance that state employees will be prosecuted” |
Citing supposed concerns about arrest of state employees (which has never happened in any medical marijuana state), Washington Governor Christine Gregoire on Friday vetoed almost all the significant portions of a bill which would have expanded safe access to cannabis and arrest protection for patients in the state.
| Graphic: THC Finder |
Once again, Illinois is moving tantalizingly close to legalizing medical marijuana.
| Photo: Jesse Tinsley/The Spokane Spokesman-Review |
| Outside the THC Pharmacy medical marijuana dispensary, activists chant “DEA, go away!” in protest on Perry St. in Spokane, Wash., Thursday, April 28, 2011. The DEA raided the dispensary while most dispensary owners and pot activists were at a meeting about how to handle DEA raids. |
The federal Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) conducted aggressive, SWAT-style raids on Thursday on at least three dispensaries in Spokane, Washington, that provided medical marijuana to qualified patients.
| Graphic: Phawker |
CDC, based in Seattle, had already scheduled raid preparedness classes around the state this week. It turns out that the training is even more timely and needed than the group may have imagined.
| Photo: The Weed Street Journal |
| Interestingly, the 1911 Massachusetts law specifically permitted medicinal use of cannabis with a prescription |
Friday marks an unhappy anniversary in hemp history. On April 29, 1911, Massachusetts enacted the first state law making it illegal to sell or possess cannabis without a prescription, becoming the first U.S. state to institute marijuana prohibition.