Challenge to Florida ban on smokable medical marijuana gets May trial date
Published: Mar 5, 2018, 1:37 pm • Updated: Mar 5, 2018, 1:37 pm
By The Associated Press
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — A hearing on Florida banning smokable forms of medical marijuana will be heard by a circuit court judge in May.
Leon County Judge Karen Gievers will hold a non-jury trial on May 16 to determine if the ban violates the 2016 state constitutional amendment that legalized medical marijuana.
People United for Medical Marijuana, which is the committee formed by Orlando attorney John Morgan, filed the lawsuit last July against the state’s Department of Health.
Related stories
- Colorado cannabis company to expand in Florida county despite marijuana moratorium
- Medical marijuana conquered my 30-year opioid addiction, Florida man says
- Sarasota, Florida plotting workaround to comply with state MMJ laws
Morgan spearheaded the constitutional amendment, which was approved by 71 percent of voters.
The state legislature banned smoking in last year’s bill signed by Gov. Rick Scott, saying it isn’t healthy. The law does allow for vaping, edibles, oils, sprays or tinctures.
There are eight cases against the state, ranging from smoking to how the state awards licenses for medical marijuana treatment centers.
Topics: Florida, Florida Amendment 2, Florida medical marijuana, lawsuits, medical marijuana