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Prosecutor: Arizona Voters Only Legalized Marijuana Flowers, Leaves — Not Extracts

A Yavapai County prosecutor argued to the Arizona Supreme Court on Tuesday that Arizonans never intended to legalize the use of extracts and edible products made from them when they voted to legalize marijuana for medical purposes in 2010.

Benjamin Kreutzberg said the plan language of the Arizona Medical Marijuana Act permits patients to have "usable marijuana.'' That, he told the justices, means the flowers and leaves of the plant.

Anything else, including preparations made by extracting the resin— and the psychoactive THC — remains strictly illegal.

And to back his argument, Kreutzberg said the state criminal code which long predates the medical marijuana law has separate definitions for "marijuana,'' meaning the plant, and "cannabis,'' which covers things like hashish and other extracts.

But in legal arguments lasting close to 45 minutes — including a discussion of how and why marijuana is baked into brownies  — the justices didn't seem to be buying his contention.

Recently retired Justice John Pelander, sitting with the court as his replacement has not yet been appointed, said that distinction between marijuana and cannabis was not evident in the materials given to voters in 2010. In fact, he said, the definition of marijuana in the voter-approved law includes "all parts'' of the plant.

"It's undisputed in this case that the resin that we're talking about here is a part of the plant,'' Pelander said. "So tell me again why the people of Arizona would have known that resin extracted from a marijuana plant would not be covered by AMMA?''

Officially the case is about the conviction of Rodney Jones for possession of 0.05 of an ounce of hashish despite the fact he has a state-issued card allowing him to have marijuana and despite the fact he obtained it from a state-licensed dispensary. Prosecuted by the Yavapai County Attorney's Office, he was sentenced to 2 1/2 years in prison.

But the larger issue for the court is whether the network of dispensaries around Arizona will be able to continue to sell — and patients will be able to obtain — alternate forms of marijuana like candies, drinks and oils.

Attorney Robert Mandel, representing Jones, told the justices that the narrow interpretation being pushed by prosecutors makes no sense.

He said the whole purpose of the act was to enable patients with certain medical conditions to be able to access the chemicals in marijuana. And Mandel pointed out the law applies not only to adults but also to children.

"Nobody anticipated that 2-, 3-year-old minors were going to be rolling joints and smoking them, because that's absurd,'' he told the court. And Mandel said some of the medical conditions for which medical marijuana is approved include situations where people cannot smoke it or even eat it.

That led to a whole discussion of how to activate the ingredients in marijuana, the chemicals that are believed to help people with certain medical conditions.

Chief Justice Scott Bales acknowledged that reading the law the way Kreutzberg suggests — only allowing the use of the dried flowers — would mean that edibles made from extracts would be illegal.

"But it would be irrational because it would force people to use the least effective way of obtaining the therapeutic effects that are thought to be associated with cannabinoids,'' Bales said. "It would mean you would have to eat a lot of well-baked brownies.''

That whole line of questioning about how to release the active chemicals led down the path to where Justice Ann Scott Timmer noted that one of the legal briefs filed "went into some detail'' on how marijuana brownies are made.

"Now I know exactly how to do that,'' she quipped.

But the serious side of all that, said Timmer, is it appears that heat is needed to make the drug medically effective, whether by burning the leaves, baking them in other products, or using a process to obtain the extract which then can be placed into other products.

"It would not be possible, or at least have any medicinal qualities, if you will, if you simply ground up the dried buds and put them in the brownies because you wouldn't reach the amount of heat ... to get to the appropriate property,'' she said. And Timmer said there is no question in her mind but that voters clearly intended that edible forms of marijuana be allowed for medical purposes.

"Crushed up flowers wouldn't do anything for you,'' she said.

"It can be done,'' Kreutzberg replied.

"But is that likely?'' Timmer responded, saying that presumes voters intended for children to have access only to the dried flowers. Kreutzberg, however, was unwilling to concede the point.

"I disagree that even if those processes might produce a drug that might be better in some sense that that means that the people necessarily intended to adopt that formulation,'' he said.

Timmer, however, suggested that the prosecution's interpretation could lead to absurd results.

For example, she questioned what happens if a person has the flowers and rubs them in her hands, leaving an oily residue.

"Would the oily residue be prohibited?'' Timmer asked.

"If something constitutes cannabis, and if something is no longer a mixture or preparation of the marijuana flowers, then, yes, it counts as cannabis,'' Kreutzberg said, and would be illegal under the Arizona Medical Marijuana Act.

Bales also questioned Kreutzberg's contention that the historical distinction in the criminal code between marijuana and cannabis somehow means that voters intended to limit the use of the drug solely to the leaves and flowers. He pointed out that the 2010 law clearly spells out that what's allowed also includes "preparations'' of those parts of the plant.

"So it's hard for me to see how you can attribute to the voters an intent to preserve a broad prohibition on cannabis and only permit a more narrow definition of marijuana when the AMMA itself has a broader definition,'' Bales said.

The justices gave no hint as to when they will rule.

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