New Hampshire: Judge Pondering Cancer Patient's Plea For Marijuana Card

Jacob Redmond

Well-Known Member
Linda Horan, diagnosed in July with late-stage lung cancer, says she may be dead before New Hampshire opens its first medical marijuana dispensaries early next year.

She wants a judge to order the state to grant her a medical marijuana identification card now so she can buy marijuana legally in Maine. But a judge on Thursday postponed a ruling on her request.

Horan didn't testify at the hearing, but she said later that she's frustrated and called it "nonsense" that the state doesn't have dispensaries up and running more than two years after the law legalizing medical marijuana was passed in 2013.

"A lot of people who would have benefited have since passed on," she said. "The clock is ticking on me. I don't have a lot of time."

The Alstead resident filed a lawsuit against the commissioner of the state Department of Health and Human Services earlier this month, seeking an emergency order forcing the agency to issue her a card before dispensaries are open. According to her lawsuit, all five of her doctors have determined she qualifies for medical marijuana to help with anxiety, lack of sleep and nausea that has led to her weight dropping to under 100 pounds.

Lawyers for Health and Human Services argued Thursday that the agency has to balance the patient's need to obtain medical marijuana with the state's need to control its distribution at its alternative treatment centers.

"New Hampshire should not have to abandon its protocol and its plan because Maine is a step ahead," Assistant Attorney General Francis Fredericks argued Thursday in Merrimack County Superior Court. He said New Hampshire dispensaries should be open by March.

Maine will dispense marijuana to patients who have registry cards in their home states. Horan's lawyer, Paul Twomey, said the card also would protect her from being criminally charged with marijuana possession in New Hampshire.

Maine has had a medical marijuana law since 2009.

Twomey told Superior Court Judge Richard McNamara that he will provide him with an affidavit from a Maine dispensary operator saying Horan could legally obtain marijuana there if she has a New Hampshire card. He said he also will give the judge all Maine laws and regulations pertaining to medical marijuana in that state.

He said New Hampshire officials could approve Horan's application for a medical marijuana card before the end of the month, but officials have no intention of distributing the cards until the treatment centers are open.

"I want the state to stop dragging your feet over a technicality when you're dealing with sick people," Horan said. "We don't have the time to fool around."

Horan, a retired telephone worker and longtime labor activist, said that without access to medical marijuana, she would have to resort to prescription opiates "and I would not be awake and aware."

McNamara did not indicate when he will rule. He gave both sides until Nov. 19 to file documents on whether Horan could use a New Hampshire registry identification card to legally obtain marijuana from out-of-state dispensaries.

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News Moderator: Jacob Redmond 420 MAGAZINE ®
Full Article: Judge Pondering Cancer Patient's Plea For Marijuana Card
Author: Lynne Tuohy
Contact: Email CNY Central
Photo Credit: Lynne Tuohy
Website: CNY Central
 
...Lawyers for Health and Human Services argued Thursday that the agency has to balance the patient's need to obtain medical marijuana with the state's need to control its distribution at its alternative treatment centers...
Stay tuned to find out whose "need" is ultimately deemed as the one with the most erm... merit, value, significance?

I really need to pace meself reading these news articles.
Can only handle just so many throbbing veins in the forehead on a given day.
 
Get up Stand up by Peter Tosh She wants HER GOVERNMENT to " grant" her what? The right to live a self controlling self realizing life? What the fuck has happened to us?
 
Stay tuned to find out whose "need" is ultimately deemed as the one with the most erm... merit, value, significance?

I really need to pace meself reading these news articles.
Can only handle just so many throbbing veins in the forehead on a given day.
Can you imagine the throbbing veins that Sam Adams and his revolutionary brethren and sistren felt? The throbbing veins are worth it! Read on, and comment more. We want to know what you think, you have something of value to add to this conversation.
 
Out of the entirely way too many stories taking place that illustrate what is becoming a common form of injustice in this country, Ms. Horan's struck a chord.

I've a google alert set to hopefully follow her journey.
 
From an article in yesterdays Centre Daily Times out of State College, PA:

Cancer Patient's Lawyer Says She Can Get Marijuana in Maine

BY LYNNE TUOHY
Associated Press

CONCORD, N.H.
A woman with late-stage lung cancer could get medical marijuana in Maine if New Hampshire health officials issue her an identification card saying she's eligible before the state opens its own dispensaries, her lawyer said Thursday in court documents.

Linda Horan wants a judge to order the state to grant her a medical marijuana ID card now so she can buy marijuana legally in Maine. Lawyers for the state argue that would undermine New Hampshire's need to control distribution.
....


Horan's lawyer, Paul Twomey, filed affidavits from Maine dispensary operators saying Horan could get marijuana there with a New Hampshire ID card.
...

Twomey said in court last week that New Hampshire officials could approve Horan's application for a medical marijuana card before the end of the month, but officials have no intention of distributing the cards until the treatment centers are open.

State Rep. Renny Cushing, a co-sponsor of the medical marijuana law passed in 2013, said Thursday he's frustrated that health officials are spending time and money trying to thwart lawmakers' intentions.

"People should have been going out of their way to treat her and every other patient with dignity and compassion rather than throwing up barriers," Cushing said. "Virtually every lawmaker is shaking their heads in disbelief."
...
 
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