The California Supreme Court concluded today that the legislature cannot set a limit on the amount of marijuana a qualified medi-pot patient may possess under the state’s Compassionate Use Act.
At issue was a legislative attempt to add restrictions to the voter-approved 1996 proposition that created the state’s medi-mari law, the oldest in the U.S. The 2003 rules included a provision that would limit the amount of pot a patient could possess eight ounces, and six mature or 12 immature plants. But the court on Jan. 21 said that the amount of pot a “qualified” medi patient can possess is as much as “reasonably related to meet his or her current medical needs,” the court wrote in its 56-page opinion.
This article appears in January 15 • 2010.



