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| | |-+  Judge won't let Franklin Township man cite medical need for marijuana - 7/29/09
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Author Topic: Judge won't let Franklin Township man cite medical need for marijuana - 7/29/09  (Read 3430 times)
jackcat
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« Reply #15 on: August 02, 2009, 07:26:29 PM »

I know what a hung jury is.  I said that the hunging member were convinced to find me guilty after I, my attorney, and the prosecutor were told it was hung.  and that they wanted a re-reading of a part of the stature about the time between the stop and the time of taking the test.  I was under the limit at the beginning, but because they waited 45 minutes to an hour before they tested me, and I had just drank a 16 ozer before I left the house to go get more, it put me over the limit.  And they had a MADD ringer in there.  A PGA golfer who at first asked to be dismissed from jury duty, was denied, and then was put on the jury by the prosecutor and they became the jury foreperson.  So, please understand I know what I'm talking about.  joint peace
« Last Edit: August 02, 2009, 07:37:39 PM by jackcat » Logged

My two cents.  Smoke it if you got it!  The strong stuff!
jackcat
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40 yrs of Cannabis Experience & Persecution


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« Reply #16 on: August 02, 2009, 07:34:16 PM »

My lawyer wasn't crappy.  He went with me to investigate and confim my finds about the speed trap.  YOu don't know Chester County,They raked it in from that thing for years and years.  Now there is a four way stop sign so people leaving town aren't gaining speed to go from 35 to 55 in a short stretch.  joint peace

The lawyer no longer practices in Chester County because of their shady practices.  And about the weed thing, he smoke in the day andthought the whole thing was bullshit.  So, take my word for it.  My family has been in the commonwealth since the time of Penn, and in Chester County since the time West Chester was Called Turk's Head and before.  Hence, the judges admonition of my "gentleman's farming" during sentencing.  I have relatives and family friends in the system there so............................  And, had I the money, I would have beaten them. peace joint
« Last Edit: August 02, 2009, 07:36:38 PM by jackcat » Logged

My two cents.  Smoke it if you got it!  The strong stuff!
Quietus
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« Reply #17 on: August 02, 2009, 08:12:12 PM »

I know what a hung jury is.  I said that the hunging member were convinced to find me guilty after I, my attorney, and the prosecutor were told it was hung.  and that they wanted a re-reading of a part of the stature about the time between the stop and the time of taking the test.  I was under the limit at the beginning, but because they waited 45 minutes to an hour before they tested me, and I had just drank a 16 ozer before I left the house to go get more, it put me over the limit.  And they had a MADD ringer in there.  A PGA golfer who at first asked to be dismissed from jury duty, was denied, and then was put on the jury by the prosecutor and they became the jury foreperson.  So, please understand I know what I'm talking about.  joint peace

My apologies.  I must have interpreted what you wrote incorrectly.  You said it was hung and not on your record so I simply put two and two together.
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jackcat
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« Reply #18 on: August 02, 2009, 09:05:10 PM »

And it was an admitted LPGA player, not PGA.  joint peace
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My two cents.  Smoke it if you got it!  The strong stuff!
jackcat
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Posts: 581


40 yrs of Cannabis Experience & Persecution


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« Reply #19 on: August 02, 2009, 09:08:23 PM »

I know what a hung jury is.  I said that the hunging member were convinced to find me guilty after I, my attorney, and the prosecutor were told it was hung.  and that they wanted a re-reading of a part of the stature about the time between the stop and the time of taking the test.  I was under the limit at the beginning, but because they waited 45 minutes to an hour before they tested me, and I had just drank a 16 ozer before I left the house to go get more, it put me over the limit.  And they had a MADD ringer in there.  A PGA golfer who at first asked to be dismissed from jury duty, was denied, and then was put on the jury by the prosecutor and they became the jury foreperson.  So, please understand I know what I'm talking about.  joint peace

hanging member was convinced.  My English isn't that fucked up.  and my computer acted funny when I posted those two replies. 439
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My two cents.  Smoke it if you got it!  The strong stuff!
Quietus
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« Reply #20 on: August 02, 2009, 11:18:16 PM »

hanging member was convinced.  My English isn't that fucked up.  and my computer acted funny when I posted those two replies. 439

I have this joke I always use on my friends when they come to me with computer issues.  I tell them it's hardware error, there's a faulty part between the keyboard and the chair.
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jackcat
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Posts: 581


40 yrs of Cannabis Experience & Persecution


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« Reply #21 on: August 03, 2009, 10:25:26 AM »

hanging member was convinced.  My English isn't that fucked up.  and my computer acted funny when I posted those two replies. 439

I have this joke I always use on my friends when they come to me with computer issues.  I tell them it's hardware error, there's a faulty part between the keyboard and the chair.

Actually mine came about because of poor editing on a sentence rewrite.  cannabis
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My two cents.  Smoke it if you got it!  The strong stuff!
JTSpangler
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« Reply #22 on: August 07, 2009, 09:59:11 PM »

A related hypothetical question:  what if copters spot growing plants on your property and you want to plead a necessity defense, that you grew Cannabis for personal medical use when all other remedies were not tolerated or too risky to try.  Doesn't the necessity defense _require_ defendant's evidence of her medical condition and history?  Isn't it a deprivation of that common law defense to bar testimony necessary to prove it?  I believe the N.J.Super. got it wrong on this one.  Help us, App.Div.
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Quietus
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« Reply #23 on: August 08, 2009, 03:13:23 AM »

A related hypothetical question:  what if copters spot growing plants on your property and you want to plead a necessity defense, that you grew Cannabis for personal medical use when all other remedies were not tolerated or too risky to try.  Doesn't the necessity defense _require_ defendant's evidence of her medical condition and history?  Isn't it a deprivation of that common law defense to bar testimony necessary to prove it?  I believe the N.J.Super. got it wrong on this one.  Help us, App.Div.


I don't believe a judge would allow it, no.

First off, being a common law defense it would only be a defense to violations of state law, not federal prosecutions.  So it initially matters which court he's in.  Not just state vs federal court, but which state in particular.  For there will be wide variations in details of a necessity defense from state to state.

Second the necessity defense, afaik, is usually restricted to an urgent and immediate necessity.  An emergency for all intensive purposes.  If someone is chasing you with a knife, you can say break a store window to get away from him.  Or better yet the police can break down your door, which would normally incur charges of trespass and breaking and entering, if they believe there's a dire medical emergency.  In addition the harm caused has to be less grave than the harm prevented.

Third is the consideration of reasonable alternatives.  You can't commit arson because you're cold.  You can't steal food because you're hungry.  That's because there are shelters and welfare benefits.  In your hypothetical situation there would be marinol, oxycodone or a myriad of other alternatives to breaking the law.

That's my understanding of a necessity defense.  Of course I could be wrong, I'm not a lawyer just a rational and logical sort of guy.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_v._Oakland_Cannabis_Buyers'_Cooperative

So curious I went and did a quick search.  It appears it's been tried before, and the supreme court decided it's not a valid defense in federal cases.

Quote
Justice Thomas wrote for the majority. The OCBC contended that the Controlled Substances Act was susceptible of a medical necessity exception to the ban on distribution and manufacture of marijuana. The Court concluded otherwise.

Since 1812, the Court had held that there were no common-law crimes in federal law. See United States v. Hudson and Goodwin. That is, the law required Congress, rather than the federal courts, to define federal crimes. The Controlled Substances Act did not recognize a medical necessity exception. Thus "a medical necessity exception for marijuana is at odds with the terms of the Controlled Substances Act." When it passed the Controlled Substances Act, Congress made a value judgment that marijuana had "no currently accepted medical use." It was not the province of the Court to usurp this value judgment made by the legislature. Thus, it was wrong for the Ninth Circuit to hold that the Controlled Substances Act did contain a medical necessity defense. It was also wrong for the Ninth Circuit to order the district court to fashion a more limited injunction that would take into account the fact that marijuana was necessary for certain people to obtain relief from symptoms of chronic illnesses.


http://www.amarillo.com/stories/032808/new_9971268.shtml

I also found this interesting case where a man in Texas evidently successfully convinced a judge to allow just such a defense and won an acquittal.  Perhaps Texas being a historically conservative state, it's common law grants more freedom as a result of a social emphasis on individual liberty.  Just a hunch.  I can't be sure as the Texas Law Library's search function blows chunks.  I can't even find the case.
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