The Palm Beach Post

Judge scolds state for ignoring court order on pot licenses

- By Dara Kam

TALLAHASSE­E — In a harshly worded order scolding state officials for treating the Constituti­on “like a recommenda­tion,” a Tallahasse­e judge Friday gave the Department of Health two weeks to begin registerin­g new medical-marijuana operators or risk being found in contempt.

Leon County Circuit Judge Charles Dodson, siding with Tampa-based Florigrown LLC, rebuked Gov. Rick Scott, the Scott administra­tion and the Republican-dominated Legislatur­e for failing to properly carry out a 2016 constituti­onal amendment that broadly legalized medical marijuana.

Florigrown, owned in part by Tampa strip-club operator Joe Redner, filed the legal challenge after the Department of Health denied its applicatio­n for a medical marijuana license.

Dodson’s Friday order followed an August decision in which the judge found that a 2017 law, aimed at implementi­ng the amendment, is unconstitu­tional because, among other things, it caps the number of highly sought-after medical marijuana licenses health officials can issue.

Although he found the law unconstitu­tional two months ago, Dodson delayed a ruling on Florigrown’s motion for a temporary injunction to give health officials time to comply with his original findings.

Dodson ruled verbally from the bench Wednesday in favor of Florigrown, but Friday’s written order — which the judge alone penned — severely reprimande­d state health officials for failing to follow his instructio­ns.

When he issued the Aug. 2 order, Dodson “was hopeful” that the health department “would take action to cure the serious constituti­onal problems” he identified in the state law, the judge wrote in Friday’s 6-page order.

Instead, a lawyer for the state agency this week “essentiall­y conceded ... that for the purpose of this case there have been no significan­t changes in the department’s regulation­s” or its handling of Florigrown’s applicatio­n, according to Dodson.

“In other words, the court order was ignored by defendants,” he wrote.

State health officials are in an “unfamiliar situation” because the Legislatur­e has the authority to implement most constituti­onal amendments. But the medical marijuana amendment specifical­ly gave the responsibi­lity to the Department of Health “to ensure the availabili­ty and safe use of medical marijuana by qualifying patients,” Dodson noted.

The law passed by the Legislatur­e during a 2017 special session provided “guidance” to the state agency, but it “was in several ways significan­tly inconsiste­nt with the Constituti­on, as pointed out in the August 2 order,” the judge wrote.

In August, Dodson found the 2017 law unconstitu­tional because it requires marijuana operators licensed by the state to cultivate, process, and dispense medical marijuana — something known as “vertical integratio­n” — as opposed to breaking the activities into separate parts for licensure.

And the judge ruled that the law improperly restricted who could get licenses. The law ordered health officials to grant licenses to operators who were already up and running in Florida or who were involved in litigation as of Jan. 1, 2017. The law also required a license for a black farmer who meets certain conditions and set aside a preference for applicants with certain ties to the citrus industry.

“Thus, we have the department with specific duties placed on it by the Constituti­on, and the Legislatur­e telling them incorrectl­y what to do, by statute. Neverthele­ss, the Constituti­on has very specific details in it. And the Constituti­on is the law of the land. The Constituti­on prevails over the statute,” he wrote.

Dodson’s order for a temporary injunction blocks the health department from moving forward with the applicatio­n process laid out in the 2017 law and gives the state until 5 p.m. Oct. 19 to begin registerin­g medical marijuana treatment centers “in accordance with the plain language of the Medical Marijuana Amendment.”

The judge also ordered the state to register Florigrown by 5 p.m. Oct. 19, unless the health department “can clearly demonstrat­e to this court that such registrati­on would result in unsafe use of medical marijuana by qualifying patients.”

Dodson also emphasized to the defendants — the health department, the agency’s Office of Medical Marijuana Use and various state health officials — “that this is a court order,” before concluding with a rare warning: “Willful violation of the court order may result in sanctions, which could include a finding of contempt of court.”

Department of Health spokesman Nick Van Der Linden said in an email that the agency is reviewing the order, noting that it “does not impact the availabili­ty of medical marijuana in Florida” to the state’s 170,000 qualified patients.

Redner and his legal team, however, hailed Dodson’s order and his choice of words. “I think our Legislatur­e, I think our governor, I think they’re lawless. They think they’re above the law. They won’t follow the law. And we’ll see now if this judge can put the fear of the judiciary in them and do what the Constituti­on says,” Redner said.

Redner recently won another lawsuit against the health department, when a judge ruled that the 77-yearold can grow his own marijuana to “juice.” Redner’s doctors recommende­d juicing to prevent a recurrence of lung cancer.

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