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Cannabis in Montana

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Cannabis in Montana is legal for medical uses, but illegal for recreational use since 1929. Medical cannabis was legalized by ballot initiative in 2004, with a failed attempt at repeal by the legislature in 2011, and a ballot initiative has been proposed to legalize recreational cannabis in 2016.

Prohibition

Cannabis was banned in Montana in 1929, following a Health Committee meeting which was described in the local paper as "great fun", during which a representative justified the ban due to marijuana's effects on Mexicans: "When some beet field peon takes a few rares of this stuff... he thinks he has just been elected president of Mexico so he starts out to execute all his political enemies."[1]

Kurth Ranch case

In 1985, the Kurth family of Fort Benton turned to cannabis growing to save their failing beef ranch. Their efforts were successful, and after reducing their debts they decided to scale back their cannabis business, but were then threatened by drug traffickers they had done business with. The ranch was attacked by criminals impersonating DEA agents who beat the owners and stole plants, and the couple was threatened with reporting their activities to the DEA if they did not pay extortion money. The extortionists did indeed report the ranch, and in October of 1987 it was raided by the DEA, and the Kurths arrested.[2]

Following their prosecution on drug charges, the Kurths were informed that they also owed tax on their cannabis proceeds to the Montana Department of Revenue. In the 1994 Supreme Court case Montana Dept. of Revenue v. Kurth Ranch, the court concluded that Montana's 1987 Dangerous Drug Tax Act, passed just weeks before the Kurth's arrest, was a punitive tax rather than normal revenue generation, and that to tax their proceeds after the Kurths had already been punished for drug charges would be unconstitutional double jeopardy.[3]

Medical cannabis

Measure I 148, the Montana Medical Marijuana Act, was a ballot initiative approved by 62% of the popular vote in 2004: 276,042 to 170,579.[4][5]

There were allegations of impropriety committed by the federal government, as ONDCP Deputy Director Scott Burns had traveled to Montana and Alaska to campaign against those states' cannabis legalization measures.[6]

2011 attempted repeal and limitations

In 2011, House Bill 161 to repeal I-148 was passed by both houses of the Montana Congress, but vetoed by Governor Brian Schweitzer.[7] Following the veto, the Montana Congress instead emplaced strong restrictions on the medical program, but a number of the restrictions were blocked by District Judge James Reynolds pending further review. The 2011 attempts at limitations were sparked by the rapidly growing number of medical marijuana cardholders in the state, growing from two thousand in March 2009, to 31 thousand by May 2011; following the restrictions, by November 2014 the number of cardholders had dropped to over nine thousand.[8][9]

2016 ballot initiatives

As of mid-2015, there are three proposed ballot initiatives for the November 2016 elections in Montana: a proposal to loosen the rules on quantities and recipients for medical cannabis, Glendive journalist Anthony Varriano's proposal to legalize recreational cannabis for adults 21 and over, and Billings businessman Steve Zabawa's proposal to require Montana's drug policy to follow federal policy, which would put an end to the state's medical marijuana program.[10][11]

References

  1. ^ Robert M. Hardaway (2003). No Price Too High: Victimless Crimes and the Ninth Amendment. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 92–. ISBN 978-0-275-95056-9.
  2. ^ "Rancher Dick Kurth's World Went Up in Smoke After He Bet His Family's Future on Dope". people.com.
  3. ^ "MONTANA DEPT. OF REVENUE v. KURTH RANCH". Findlaw.
  4. ^ Beth Williams (18 October 2013). Exploring Initiative and Referendum Law: Selected State Research Guides. Routledge. pp. 199–. ISBN 978-1-317-96527-5.
  5. ^ "Montana Medical Marijuana Allowance, I-148 (2004)". ballotpedia.org.
  6. ^ Jock Pan (20 May 2010). FEDERAL GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED STATES. Xlibris Corporation. pp. 83–. ISBN 978-1-4500-8671-4.
  7. ^ "Montana Governor vetoes repeal of 2004 medical marijuana measure". ballotpedia.org.
  8. ^ MATT VOLZ Associated Press. "Montana Supreme Court to consider medical marijuana commercial sales". missoulian.com.
  9. ^ "Judge blocks medical marijuana restrictions in Montana". missoulian.com.
  10. ^ Edward O'Brien. "Three Marijuana Initiatives Could Appear On Montana Ballots This November". mtpr.org.
  11. ^ Troy Carter (8 July 2015). "Initiative proposes removal of restrictions on medical marijuana in Montana". Bozeman Daily Chronicle.