Utah Rep. Gage Froerer, a Republican from Huntsville who sponsored the new state law, said families are willing to take that risk to treat their children with the oil.
“They know very well that this may not protect them from the DEA if the federal prosecutors stepped in,” Froerer told his colleagues earlier this month.
Some legal experts say states authorizing certain strains of marijuana medicine may be unlikely to produce any relief for patients.
Sam Kamin, a University of Denver law professor who helped craft Colorado’s marijuana regulations, said there’s no provision to allow Colorado businesses to sell or ship marijuana products out of the state. “They could sell an ounce to someone who shows up here, then that person could take it home at their own risk,” Kamin said. Joel Stanley and his brothers grow the plant in the mountains west of Colorado Springs and have a waitlist of about 2,000 for the marijuana product. Stanley said families on his waiting list now have to meet Colorado residency requirements, such as establishing an address and becoming a registered patient, in order to obtain the product under that state’s medical marijuana laws. With the new Utah law, families will still need to go through those hoops to get the product, but they’ll be allowed to possess it in both states, Stanley said.“From a federal government standpoint, the fact that it crosses state lines doesn’t really make it any more illegal,” he said. “Itap just illegal period.”
Stanley’s group is working to produce the extract as a hemp product later this fall, which he said makes it no more illegal than products such as hemp oil and hemp milk sold at stores around the country. He said that will allow patients to bypass residency requirements to get the extract. However, Paul Armentano, deputy director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, or NORML, dismissed the theory that some strains of this drug are so low in THC that they would grow it as industrial hemp and not pot. “Whether you can derive CBD oil from hemp, nobody has any idea,” Armentano said, arguing that parents of sick children in cannabinoid oil states will be disappointed. “The proposed solution to their plight is not a solution at all.” ———Associated Press writers Kristen Wyatt and Nicholas Riccardi in Denver contributed to this report.
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