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Medical marijuana passes in michigan

Wed, 11/05/2008 - 08:55

Lansing (ap) -- Michigan voters on Tuesday passed a medical marijuana ballot measure - making the state the 13th to allow severely ill patients to use the illegal drug.

With 42 percent of the precincts reporting, 63 percent, or 1,077,103 people, voted "yes'' on Proposal 1, which removes state penalties for registered patients to buy, grow and use small amounts of marijuana. Thirty-seven percent, or 619,882 voters, were opposed.

Opponents couldn't derail the measure. In fact, only one state, South Dakota, has failed to OK a ballot attempt. Of the 12 other states with medical marijuana laws, eight stemmed from ballot initiatives; four were enacted by state legislatures.

Michigan Court of Appeals Judge Bill Schuette, chairman of the opposition group Citizens Protecting Michigan's Kids, said he was disappointed with the outcome but not the effort.

``It appears we came up short,'' he said. ``We waged a good campaign, a hard-fought campaign. But we were severely underfunded, and that's always a challenge.''

The coalition included more than two dozen medical, law enforcement, anti-drug and other organizations, including the Michigan State Medical Society, the Prosecuting Attorneys Association of Michigan and Citizens for Traditional Values.

Dianne Byrum, spokeswoman for the support group Citizens Protecting Michigan's Kids, called it a ``victory for patients and their families.''

``Voters knew right from the beginning the medical value of marijuana,'' she said.

Opponents launched their first TV ad last week that says so-called ``pot shops'' exploded in California when that state passed a medical marijuana law. Critics such as law enforcement officials say Michigan's law wouldn't prevent the proliferation of stores that grow and sell marijuana.

Backers responded that the Michigan measure was significantly different from California's law. Supporters' ads featured a woman who suffers from multiple sclerosis and experiences blindness from optic neuritis, and a retired physician who helped his wife by procuring medical marijuana to ease her symptoms of chemotherapy as she underwent treatment for ovarian cancer.

While the measure will remove state-level penalties for registered patients using marijuana, it won't create legal dispensaries for the drug. Nor will it affect the federal ban on marijuana, which makes possessing marijuana for any purpose illegal.

Proposal 1 advocates ran ads urging voters to support the measure. They featured Rochelle Lampkin of Detroit, who suffers from multiple sclerosis and experiences blindness from optic neuritis, and George Wagoner, a retired physician from Manistee who helped his wife of 51 years by procuring medical marijuana to ease her symptoms of chemotherapy Larry Lenchner, 56, of Birmingham, voted for the measure.

``If you got cancer and you're dying and you want to smoke weed, it's just another pharmaceutical to me,'' he said.

Patricia Ross, 40, also of Birmingham, voted against the measure because she's worried about children getting access to marijuana.
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Good news . Thanks to all who voted yes.........x

Comments

Re: Medical marijuana passes in michigan

Submitted by brodie on Thu, 2008-11-06 - 13:15

ide say they need more than an act of medical marijana for this place after a reead about a man who was just about killed durring a seizure.think he was forced to plead insanity and let some crooked cops get away.

               The case in Michigan involved Daniel Beloungea, who was taking a daily walk in his neighborhood when he experienced a complex partial seizure, which left him in a state of semi-consciousness. Complex partial seizures are associated with repetitive involuntary movements, sometimes for up to 30 minutes, with post-seizure disorientation. Beloungea needs to walk daily as a form of rehabilitation to help restore functioning in his legs; this functioning was impaired following brain surgery to treat his seizures. A person passing by noticed Mr. Beloungea acting erratically and called police to report his behavior. When officers arrived on the scene, they apparently assumed that his failure to respond to their questions and his erratic involuntary movements amounted to resistance, and failed to recognize the obvious signs of a seizure. Furthermore, they failed to inspect the medical alert bracelet he was wearing, which indicates clearly that he has epilepsy.

According to police reports, when Mr. Beloungea was unresponsive to police direction, the bag he was carrying was kicked by police from his hand, and when he flailed his arms involuntarily, he was tasered, sending 50,000 volts of electricity through his body (risking serious injury or death); hit with a police baton; threatened at gunpoint; and handcuffed behind his back. (The handcuffing itself is dangerous for persons experiencing a seizure, as it can lead to further seizure-related agitation and struggling, possibly causing asphyxiation or even cardiac arrest.) He was then prosecuted for assaulting police officers and disorderly conduct, notwithstanding considerable evidence, including the state’s own mental health evaluation, confirming that his actions were involuntary and solely the product of a seizure.

Then, apparently because of a gap in Michigan law, Mr. Beloungea was forced to plead not guilty by reason of insanity, rather than being permitted to submit evidence that he lacked the mental and physical capacity to commit the crimes for which he was charged. Because state law requires that all persons who have been adjudicated not guilty by reason of insanity be committed for a mental health evaluation, a man who posed no risk to anyone was forced to languish in a penal institution housing violent criminal offenders (where he experienced at least two subsequent seizures). He was discharged from the psychiatric facility, on September 28, 2006, after a stay of more than three weeks.

ide say they need more than an act of medical marijana for this place after a reead about a man who was just about killed durring a seizure.think he was forced to plead insanity and let some crooked cops get away.

               The case in Michigan involved Daniel Beloungea, who was taking a daily walk in his neighborhood when he experienced a complex partial seizure, which left him in a state of semi-consciousness. Complex partial seizures are associated with repetitive involuntary movements, sometimes for up to 30 minutes, with post-seizure disorientation. Beloungea needs to walk daily as a form of rehabilitation to help restore functioning in his legs; this functioning was impaired following brain surgery to treat his seizures. A person passing by noticed Mr. Beloungea acting erratically and called police to report his behavior. When officers arrived on the scene, they apparently assumed that his failure to respond to their questions and his erratic involuntary movements amounted to resistance, and failed to recognize the obvious signs of a seizure. Furthermore, they failed to inspect the medical alert bracelet he was wearing, which indicates clearly that he has epilepsy.

According to police reports, when Mr. Beloungea was unresponsive to police direction, the bag he was carrying was kicked by police from his hand, and when he flailed his arms involuntarily, he was tasered, sending 50,000 volts of electricity through his body (risking serious injury or death); hit with a police baton; threatened at gunpoint; and handcuffed behind his back. (The handcuffing itself is dangerous for persons experiencing a seizure, as it can lead to further seizure-related agitation and struggling, possibly causing asphyxiation or even cardiac arrest.) He was then prosecuted for assaulting police officers and disorderly conduct, notwithstanding considerable evidence, including the state’s own mental health evaluation, confirming that his actions were involuntary and solely the product of a seizure.

Then, apparently because of a gap in Michigan law, Mr. Beloungea was forced to plead not guilty by reason of insanity, rather than being permitted to submit evidence that he lacked the mental and physical capacity to commit the crimes for which he was charged. Because state law requires that all persons who have been adjudicated not guilty by reason of insanity be committed for a mental health evaluation, a man who posed no risk to anyone was forced to languish in a penal institution housing violent criminal offenders (where he experienced at least two subsequent seizures). He was discharged from the psychiatric facility, on September 28, 2006, after a stay of more than three weeks.

Re: Medical marijuana passes in michigan

Submitted by xgi on Tue, 2008-11-11 - 21:21

I wonder what city this was. I could belive it though There's enough rednecks cause when I had a sezuire the local cops thought I was on drugs but they seen my medical alert and they handled it half ass.

 You should send this story to all the major news networks 

 

I wonder why nobody reported this

I wonder what city this was. I could belive it though There's enough rednecks cause when I had a sezuire the local cops thought I was on drugs but they seen my medical alert and they handled it half ass.

 You should send this story to all the major news networks 

 

I wonder why nobody reported this

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