logo
More battles ahead over medical cannabis licenses in Alabama

More battles ahead over medical cannabis licenses in Alabama

Yahoo25-04-2025

HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (WHNT) — It has been nearly four years since Governor Kay Ivey signed a measure legalizing medical cannabis in Alabama, but medical cannabis is still not available in Alabama.The cannabis business license selection process, overseen by the Alabama Medical Cannabis Commission, was marked by scoring errors and revotes, and when the final awards were announced, lawsuits followed.
'You'll hear it directly from me': Despite reports, Tuberville remains non-committal regarding run for governor
This week, a Montgomery County Circuit Court judge issued an order Monday that freezes awards of integrated facility licenses, which cover every step of the medical cannabis process. The court's ruling found the Alabama Medical Cannabis Commission's use of an 'emergency rule' to issue licenses was invalid and its actions other than declaring an emergency were not consistent with a declared emergency.
The Alabama Medical Cannabis Commission was sharply critical of the court's order.
'The circuit court entered injunctions that have completely stalled the Commission's licensing process for the past 16 months,' the AMCC said. 'Now that the appellate court has thrown out those injunctions, the circuit court, in a ruling that could have been made at any point during that 16-month stall, has substituted its judgment for that of the Commission and declared invalid a patient-driven Commission rule that was adopted 18 months ago.'
News 19 spoke to parties on both sides of the ongoing debate, and despite the continued court battles, they expressed optimism there is now a path in place to get final approval for medical cannabis license approvals.
Alabama executes a man who said he was guilty of rape and murder and deserved to die
Joey Robertson, the president and CEO of Wagon Trail MedServe in Cullman, said he's concerned the delays will continue to hurt Alabama patients. Robertson's company was awarded an integrated facility license, which covers everything from cultivation to dispensing. He is frustrated by the Montgomery County court's ruling.
'The biggest loser in this right now are the patients in Alabama,' he said. 'They have been looking for relief, they've been sick for years. They've been looking for this relief, they've fought for this relief for years, and here we are tied up in court, unfortunately. This is not a case of who's qualified and who's not qualified at this point. The commission has picked good candidates to run this program for the state of Alabama. The problem is the people who were told 'no' will not accept it.'
Will Somerville, an attorney for Alabama Always, a company challenging the commission's integrated facility licensing awards process, said the delays are due to the actions of Alabama regulators, not the lawsuits.
'The reason medical marijuana is not available in Alabama is the Alabama Medical Cannabis Commission did not follow the law, the Administrative Procedure Act, refused to explain why it made any licensing decisions so far, which is an absolute denial of due process.'Somerville said one day soon, the commission will have to hold a contested case process, during which license award winners and those seeking a license will argue their company's merits and challenge their competitors.'You've got to demonstrate you can commence cultivation within 60 days, you've got a $2 million bond, you're adequately capitalized so that you can survive for two years without having any income,' he said. 'You would have an administrative law judge appointed, to hear all the applications, hear all the applicants on how they can satisfy the significant, substantive requirements in the Compassion Act.' Robertson said he's optimistic about getting medical cannabis to patients soon'We're going to go to the appellate court, this is going to be overturned shortly, the appellate court has moved quicker on a lot of these issues than they have on some others,' he said. 'I think they've made their case time and time again, that the process is not complete. So I would say my optimism is on level 10, that we will be able to get patients' medicine this year.'
The Alabama Medical Cannabis Commission said it has plans to move forward.
'In reality, today, at least three licensed medical cannabis cultivators are growing cannabis in Alabama. The Commission, still focused on patient needs, will continue to work tirelessly to see that at least one dispensary license is issued as soon as possible.'
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

NY judge censured for throwing a fit at school board over his son not being named class valedictorian
NY judge censured for throwing a fit at school board over his son not being named class valedictorian

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

NY judge censured for throwing a fit at school board over his son not being named class valedictorian

A Nassau County judge was censured by a state commission after he threw a fit and publicly chastised a school board for not naming his straight-A son the valedictorian of his graduating high school class last year. Long Beach City Court Judge Corey E. Klein was censured — or written up for misconduct — by the State Commission on Judicial Conduct, the Albany-based group announced Monday, noting the judge agreed to the censure. Klein stormed into an April 2024 public school board meeting, seeking to challenge its decision and policies that led to his son not being designated top of the class, according to the commission. When the school district lawyer Christopher Powers tried to interrupt Klein's tirade, the judge told him not to 'try to outlawyer me' and pressed on, the group said. Members of the board continued to try and stop Klein's nonsensical rant and even turned off his microphone. Yet he continued to shout, his voice booming as he apparently grew tired of Powers' continued reference to him as 'Counsel.' 'You can refer to me, Counsel, as judge,' Klein said, according to the commission. 'If you are going to try to be a lawyer, then refer to me by my title as well, okay. Thank you,' he added after his microphone was turned back on. As board members tried to explain that the public meeting — which was also streamed online — was not a proper setting to appeal the decision on his son's viability for valedictorian, Klein started to shout over them, the commission said. 'I'm gonna stay up here now and I'm going to continue speaking,' Klein stubbornly insisted. 'Your Honor. We are not in court at this point,' Powers tried to interject, but to no avail as Klein steamrolled over him. 'The fact that I'd have the audacity, okay, because it's the end of my kid's career, to come up here and question a decision that you made, okay, so you try to sic your pit bull attorney on me. It's beyond reproach that you don't do something like that, okay,' Klein eventually concluded after his heated back-and-forth with the board, the commission said. The ranting judge was also accused of helping a professional acquaintance get out of $500 worth of unpaid parking tickets, according to his censure. The person's car was booted as a result of the unpaid tickets, and Klein reached out to numerous police departments to have it removed. Officers, thinking Klein was acting within his capacity as a judge, removed the boot and the acquaintance eventually paid the tickets, according to the commission. 'It corrodes public confidence in the judiciary when a judge lends the prestige of judicial office to advance a private benefit. Doing so impulsively, in an unseemly public argument over who should be a high school's honoree, or as a favor to a parking ticket scofflaw, is especially irresponsible,' Commission Administrator Robert H. Tembeckjian said in a statement. Klein has been a Long Beach judge since 2015. His term doesn't expire until the end of 2034, according to the commission.

‘She knew nothing about it': Newton judge Shelley Joseph denies helping defendant evade ICE in 2018
‘She knew nothing about it': Newton judge Shelley Joseph denies helping defendant evade ICE in 2018

Boston Globe

time7 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

‘She knew nothing about it': Newton judge Shelley Joseph denies helping defendant evade ICE in 2018

Monday's hearing involves the latest chapter in a saga that stretches from President Trump's first term to his second, amid a renewed immigration crackdown that has sparked As part of that agreement, Joseph admitted she knew that Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents were waiting to detain defendant Jose Medina-Perez, that she asked them to leave the courtroom, and that she had an off-the-record conversation with court parties that violated court rules. But she did not admit wrongdoing or deliberately helping Medina-Perez avoid ICE. Advertisement The Advertisement Joseph's disciplinary case is being heard before Denis J. McInerny, a former deputy assistant attorney general with the Department of Justice, and the commission has appointed former Superior Court chief justice Judith Fabricant as special counsel to prosecute the case. McInerny will submit his findings to the Commission within 30 days of the hearing, and the Commission can then recommend discipline to the Supreme Judicial Court. Only the Legislature can remove a judge from the bench for misconduct. The hearing began with a site visit to Newton District Court Monday morning. Proceedings resumed in Boston with the questioning of defense attorney David Jellinek, who acknowledged hatching the plan to help his client evade ICE. Fabricant accused Joseph of allowing an off-the-record conversation in violation of court rules, and accused her of lacking transparency when she later discussed the incident with senior judges. 'She did not volunteer information she should have volunteered,' Fabricant said. The hearing is scheduled to resume Tuesday morning, with testimony from former Middlesex assistant district attorney Shannon McDermott, the prosecutor for Medina-Perez' case. The controversy dates back to April 2018, when Medina-Perez, a Dominican national who had been deported twice before, was in court to face charges for possessing drugs and for being a fugitive from justice. An ICE agent had shown up to the courthouse to detain him, and Joseph had him wait outside the courtroom, what she said was in accordance with policy set by Newton District Court's First Justice Mary Heffernan. Advertisement Joseph and the prosecutor agree on a certain set of facts. On the day at issue, Medina-Perez had switched from a court appointed defender to Jellinek, a veteran private attorney who frequently practiced in Newton District Court. After a lunch break, Jellinek asked for a side bar conference, telling Joseph and McDermott that he was concerned ICE had misidentified his client and was going to detain him anyway. Jellinek then asked to go off-the-record, leading to a 52-second unrecorded conversation between himself, Joseph and the prosecutor. McDermott agreed to drop the fugitive charge, and Joseph ordered Medina-Perez released without bail pending his next hearing on the drug counts. Instead of exiting through the front door, which would be typical, Jellinek and the court officer went downstairs with Medina-Perez and released him through a back door, which the waiting ICE agents did not discover until he had already left the building. But what exactly was said during that 52-second gap in the tape recording remains under dispute. Jellinek, who was given immunity by federal prosecutors, told a grand jury he told Joseph of his plan to help Medina-Perez avoid capture, and that she agreed to it. 'My impression was she did also did not want ICE necessarily to pick up the wrong person,' Jellinek said at Monday's hearing. But Joseph's attorneys argued that Jellinek had incentive to exaggerate the judge's knowledge to avoid facing federal charges himself. Thomas Hoopes, one of Joseph's attorneys, described Jellinek's deal as a 'get-out-of-jail-free card.' 'Did anyone explain to you how rare it is for the mastermind of any crime — federally — to be immunized?' Hoopes said. Advertisement 'I never had that conversation,' Jellinek said. Mulvey described Jellinek as the 'mastermind' of an 'ill conceived scheme,' saying Joseph was left in the dark about his true intentions. 'Nobody told her Medina Perez had gone out the back door,' Mulvey said. 'She knew nothing about it.' Jellinek denied deceiving Joseph, and defended his behavior as legitimate advocacy for his client's interests. He said he asked to talk off-the-record because he knew helping Medina-Perez leave by the back door was 'right on the edge of acceptable or appropriate.' 'I was trying to protect everybody, but myself and the judge especially,' Jellinek said. Joseph is not the only judge to face federal prosecution for allegedly helping a defendant evade ICE. Last month, a federal grand jury Shelley Murphy can be reached at

4 executions are scheduled in 4 different states this week, amid an uptick nationwide
4 executions are scheduled in 4 different states this week, amid an uptick nationwide

CBS News

time9 hours ago

  • CBS News

4 executions are scheduled in 4 different states this week, amid an uptick nationwide

Four executions are expected to take place in the United States this week, with two scheduled Tuesday and one each on Thursday and Friday. The executions were ordered in Alabama, Florida, Oklahoma and South Carolina. If all of the procedures are carried out as planned, the inmates' deaths will bring the national total of executions to 24 so far this year. While four inmates being scheduled to die in the same week is not an anomaly in the U.S., their executions present an overall uptick in the use of capital punishment nationwide since January. They also come as the Trump administration seeks to resume death row executions at the federal level. Here's what to know about the executions that have been ordered this week. Gregory Hunt, Alabama Alabama inmate Gregory Hunt, 65, is scheduled to die by nitrogen hypoxia on Tuesday, Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey announced in May. Hunt received capital punishment after his conviction for the 1998 murder of Karen Lane, according to the state's Department of Corrections. The death warrant, signed by Ivey, established a 30-hour time frame for the execution to occur, starting at 12 a.m. local time Tuesday and ending on Wednesday, at the William C. Holman Correctional Facility in Atmore. Hunt will be the fifth person in Alabama to die by nitrogen hypoxia — a controversial method in which the inmate is deprived of oxygen through inhalation of pure nitrogen. As states that still practice capital punishment faced difficulties obtaining drugs for lethal injections, nitrogen hypoxia was developed as a workaround to the primary method used around the country. Execution by nitrogen asphyxiation has been the subject of intense public scrutiny within the U.S. and overseas, with U.N. human rights advocates arguing that it "could amount to torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment under international human rights law." Alabama carried out the country's first known execution with method on Kenneth Smith in January 2024. Since then, Louisiana became the only other state to execute a death row inmate with nitrogen gas in March of this year. Anthony Wainwright, Florida Florida inmate Anthony Wainwright, 54, is scheduled to die by lethal injection potentially as soon as Tuesday. His death warrant, issued by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, set a weeklong window for the execution to take place at the Florida State Prison in Raiford. The window starts at 12 p.m. local time on Tuesday and closes at 12 p.m. the following Tuesday, June 17. Wainwright's execution will be the sixth in Florida in 2025. Wainwright was sentenced to death in 1995, after receiving multiple convictions related to a "crime spree" the previous year, which included the abduction and murder of Carmen Gayheart, according to court documents. He and an accomplice, Richard Hamilton, were found to have committed the crimes after escaping prison in North Carolina in 1994. John Fitzgerald Hanson, Oklahoma The execution of John Fitzgerald Hanson, also known as George John Hanson, 60, is scheduled for Thursday in Oklahoma, following his transfer from a Louisiana federal prison earlier this year. It will be the state's second execution this year. Hanson was convicted of capital murder in Oklahoma for the 1999 death of 77-year-old Mary Bowles in Tulsa, according to court records. In order to carry out Hanson's death sentence, Oklahoma Attorney General Gentner Drummond requested his extradition back into the state from Louisiana, where the inmate had been incarcerated for decades while serving a separate life sentence for robbery. Stephen Stanko, South Carolina South Carolina is set to execute Stephen Stanko, 57, by lethal injection Friday for the 1997 murder of Laura Ling. It will be the state's fourth execution this year and its second using lethal drugs. The two death row inmates in South Carolina died by firing squad this year after the state legislature approved the method partly due to prison officials not being able to obtain drugs needed for lethal injections. Both of the inmates chose to die by bullets instead of lethal injection or the electric chair.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store