State Supreme

| | Comments (0) |

SAN FRANCISCO - A unanimous California Supreme Court has struck down a law that sought to impose limits on the amount of marijuana a medical patient can legally possess.

The California Supreme Court ruled Thursday that state lawmakers were wrong to change provisions of the voter-approved Proposition 215. The 1996 measure allowed for patients with a doctor's recommendation to possess an unspecified amount of marijuana.

The Legislature, seeking to give law enforcement guidance on when to make marijuana possession arrests, mandated in 2003 that each patient could have a maximum of 8 ounces of dried marijuana.

Leave a comment

About The
Sausage Factory

Los Angeles Daily News City Hall reporter Rick Orlov writes about politics on the local, state and national stage.

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Rick Orlov published on January 22, 2010 5:19 AM.

State Supreme Court bans pot limit was the previous entry in this blog.

State Supreme Court bans pot limit is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Recent Comments

Powered by Movable Type 4.25
 

Advertisement

Other blogs

Metrolink crash blamed on engineer in The Sausage Factory
The Media Learning Curve: Blanton and beyond in Farther Off the Wall
A little more from Cooper in Inside USC with Scott Wolf
The Early Words: Abdul-Hamid comes up big in Inside UCLA with Jon Gold
Time for Obama to Really Act Like FDR in Friendly Fire