Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Outside pot is not fine, says governor

He discourage­s out-of-state buys

- HUNTER FIELD

Gov. Asa Hutchinson on Friday discourage­d medical-marijuana patients from bringing cannabis into Arkansas from other states after patient certificat­ion cards are issued next month.

The Republican governor’s comments came two days after the Arkansas Department of Health announced that it would be issuing medical-marijuana registry ID cards earlier than expected to patients with qualifying conditions.

Industry insiders expect many Arkansas patients to travel to Oklahoma, which recently opened its first marijuana dispensari­es, to obtain the drug at least until April when the first Arkansas dispensary is expected to open. Oklahoma allows certified patients from other states to apply for temporary permits to buy cannabis there.

However, Hutchinson, who is the former head of the U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion, said the Health Department decided to issue the ID cards to ensure that patients can immediatel­y purchase medical cannabis when the first Arkansas dispensary opens.

Hutchinson added that returning to Arkansas with medical marijuana, even if legally purchased elsewhere, is a federal crime and undermines the intent of Amendment 98 to the Arkansas Constituti­on, which Arkansas passed in 2016 to legalize medical cannabis. Because the amendment provides regulatory framework for licensed dispensari­es and cultivatio­n facilities, Hutchinson said the amendment “presuppose­s” that medical cannabis be purchased from a licensed provider in Arkansas. He said it was irresponsi­ble for David Couch, the Little Rock attorney who composed the ballot measure that eventually became Amendment 98, to suggest that it would be fine for Arkansans to transport medical cannabis back to the Natural State. Couch was quoted Thursday in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette saying he wouldn’t be worried about being arrested transporti­ng medical marijuana from Oklahoma to Arkansas if he was a registered patient. “The design of the amendment is that medical marijuana would be obtained from licensed dispensari­es in Arkansas,” said Hutchinson, who also is a former U.S. attorney and congressma­n. “And the amendment does not change the fact that transporti­ng medical marijuana across state lines is a violation of federal law.” Couch said he intentiona­lly excluded a clause from Amendment 98 that would have required the medical marijuana to be purchased in Arkansas because Congress, he expects, will eventually legalize the drug nationwide, and he didn’t want to put any additional hurdles in patients’ paths. Couch added that the spirit of Amendment 98 was to include other states, pointing to a provision that protects registered patients from other states who are visiting Arkansas. He agreed with Hutchinson that it is a federal crime to transport medical cannabis from state to state, but he noted that it’s also a federal crime to simply possess the drug. “I’m consistent­ly saying you can break federal law,” Couch said. “Is that an appropriat­e thing for an attorney to say? I don’t know, probably not. But I’m not telling any client what to do; I’m saying what I would do. “It’s better than buying it from a drug dealer.” Federal prosecutor­s since 2014 have been reluctant to prosecute medical-marijuana patients and businesses in states where the drug has been legalized. Congress that year passed a provision — the Rohrabache­r-Farr amendment to an omnibus spending bill — that prohibited the U.S. Department of Justice from spending money interferin­g with state medical-marijuana laws. The provision has been included in subsequent spending bills, but it expired Dec. 21 along with the short-term spending agreement that led to the current partial federal government shutdown. A spokesman for the U.S. attorney’s office for the Western District of Arkansas declined to comment when asked whether the office would prosecute registered patients who transport medical marijuana into Arkansas, noting that it was a new issue in need of further considerat­ion. Under Amendment 98, registered patients or their caregivers may possess up to 2.5 ounces of usable marijuana. While the amendment doesn’t include language that would require the drug to be purchased in Arkansas, the Arkansas Medical Marijuana Commission included such a requiremen­t in its rules. Couch has argued that the commission doesn’t have the authority to make such a rule because its jurisdicti­on extends only to licensing growers and dispensari­es. Asked about the Arkansas State Police’s role, agency spokesman Bill Sadler said that agency expects patients to follow all applicable state laws and administra­tive rules related to the possession, transport and purchase of medical cannabis. “Arkansas State Police is prepared to enforce all applicable state laws related to the transport of medical marijuana by licensees,” he said. Hutchinson said Friday that if medical cannabis could be purchased anywhere, it would undermine the investment­s of medical-marijuana businesses in Arkansas and encourage the developmen­t of the black market. “There’s a reason we have laws, and we’re under the rule of law,” Hutchinson said. On Friday, 6,764 patients had been approved by the Health Department for registry ID cards. The cards are issued to those who have been certified by a doctor to suffer from one or more of 18 qualifying conditions. The cards require a $50 applicatio­n fee, and they must be renewed yearly for $50. The state Medical Marijuana Commission issued the first five cultivatio­n permits in July, and those companies are constructi­ng their greenhouse­s. The commission has a meeting scheduled for Wednesday to review a consulting firm’s scores of the 200 applicatio­ns for 32 dispensary licenses. It could vote to validate those scores at the Wednesday meeting.

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Couch

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