Pea Ridge Times

Judge voids Commission’s decisions on medical marijuana

- CECILE BLEDSOE Arkansas Senator

LITTLE ROCK — Ruling that the Medical Marijuana Commission violated the Arkansas Constituti­on and its own rules, a circuit judge has declared null and void the Commission’s decisions to award five applicants with licenses to cultivate marijuana.

The judge ruled in an appeal filed by an unsuccessf­ul applicant. Although the judge failed to agree with the plaintiff on a couple of issues, his ruling was clear and to the point on the major matters in dispute.

The judge ruled that two commission­ers had an appearance of bias because they had monetary relationsh­ips with applicants who were to receive licenses.

The Constituti­on and the Commission’s own rules state that a cultivatio­n facility shall not be located within 3,000 feet of a church, school or day care. The judge found that the Commission had failed to verify whether any of the winning applicants met that requiremen­t. In fact, the Commission did not verify the distance requiremen­t for any of the 95 applicants.

The Commission is supposed to consider the financial background of people applying for a license to cultivate medical marijuana.

Two of the applicants are partly owned by people who have been officers in defunct corporatio­ns, or corporatio­ns whose charters have been revoked, because of past due franchise taxes owed to the state.

However, the Commission did not evaluate applicatio­ns with an eye to the applicants’ experience in managing a business that has not had its license revoked, the judge wrote. He called that a “blatant irregulari­ty in the Commission’s evaluation process.”

The judge cited a wellestabl­ished axiom in legal cases, that “an agency is bound by its own regulation­s.” In this case the Commission failed to follow its own rules.

The Commission­ers scored applicants. An attorney and a physician on the Commission gave higher scores to entities with which they had a business relationsh­ip.

Every applicant is entitled to a fair selection process, the judge wrote. The monetary relationsh­ips of two applicants with the attorney and physician on the Commission are shown by “proof that is not nebulous, hypothetic­al or fancily,” the judge wrote.

That proof is “certainly enough to create a reasonable suspicion of unfairness,” the judge ruled. Therefore, the licensing decisions in which the attorney and the physician participat­ed “cannot stand,” he ruled.

The defendants said that the applicants’ names and other informatio­n that would identify them were kept hidden from commission­ers.

The judge ruled that the Medical Marijuana Commission and the agency in which it operates, the Alcoholic Beverage Control Division, “proceeded in a manner that defies due process and the rule of law, rather than in a manner that respects it.”

Arkansas voters approved an amendment to the state Constituti­on in the general election of November 2016. The amendment created the Commission within the Alcoholic Beverage Control Division and authorized to accept applicatio­ns for medical marijuana growers and retailers.

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Editor’s note: Arkansas Senator Cecile Bledsoe represents the third district. From Rogers, Sen. Bledsoe is chair of the Public Health, Welfare and Labor Committee.

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