Arizona Republic’s E J Montini Likes Arizona’s Medical Marijuana Law

Arizona Republic columnist E. J. Montini wrote a column in which he rips Arizona Attorney General Tom Horne and Maricopa County Attorney Bill Montgomery because they are ” two men doing everything they can to keep the state from fully implementing the medical-marijuana law that — for a third time — was approved by voters.”  Montini also said that the two “must think of Ryan Hurley as the boogeyman.”

Ryan Hurley is an Arizona attorney who is the media’s go-to-guy when they need a quote about Arizona’s medical marijuana law because he and his law firm represent a lot of applicants for medical marijuana dispensary licenses.  Montini wrote that Ryan Hurley told Montini that “His (Montgomery’s) press conference amounted to fear and intimidation rather than anything new. The county attorney enforces and prosecutes state law, not federal law. … So this sort of notion that he’s going to be out there arresting people under state law is just silly.”  Montini claims Hurley also said “even in California, where there is a lot of uncertainty, these notions that the sky is going to fall just don’t hold up.”

Even the most ardent supporters of Arizona’s medical marijuana law should acknowledge the prosecutors’ war on medical marijuana dispensaries that has been taking place in the last year.  For more on this war that the prosecutors are winning read:

  • Court rulings bode ill for medicinal pot:  “the U.S. Justice Department said that federal courts in all four California judicial districts have rejected appeals by dispensaries threatened with shutdown.  The most recent rejection came this month, when a federal court in Oakland rejected appeals filed by the Marin Alliance for Medical Marijuana in Fairfax, the Medthrive Cooperative and the Divinity Tree Patients’ Wellness Cooperative in San Francisco, and Medthrive’s landlords. Similar appeals by dispensaries in Sacramento, Butte County and Los Angeles County were rejected earlier this year. . . . All told, approximately 400 dispensaries in California have closed since the four U.S. Attorneys began their coordinated crackdown in September”

Looking at the facts some people would say that the sky has actually fallen on the California medical marijuana industry.  Hopefully Mr. Hurley and other attorneys who represent people involved in the soon-to-be operating Arizona medical marijuana dispensary have had their clients sign a good CYA letter that notifies the clients that their activities could cause them to be prosecuted and convicted of violations of federal criminal laws and that they could be imprisoned.

By |2012-08-12T09:35:05-07:00August 12th, 2012|Legal Issues, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Arizona Republic’s E J Montini Likes Arizona’s Medical Marijuana Law

Gila County Attorney Daisy Flores Won’t Prosecute People Who Comply with Arizona’s Medical Marijuana Act

Gila County Attorney Daisy Flores said, “Arizona voters determined that dispensaries should be permitted if in compliance with our Arizona law, as county attorney, I must respect the will of the people.”

By |2017-02-12T07:39:20-07:00August 11th, 2012|Marijuana Crimes, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Gila County Attorney Daisy Flores Won’t Prosecute People Who Comply with Arizona’s Medical Marijuana Act

Two AZ Medical Marijuana Patients Arrested for Growing More Plants than Allowed under Arizona’s Medical Marijuana Law

The Las Vegas Review-Journal is reporting that two Arizona card-carrying medical marijuana patients were arrested for growing more marijuana plants and possessing more marijuana than allowed under Arizona’s medical marijuana law.  The men are Trent Salem and Brandon Militello.  Trent is the son of the mayor of Kingman, Arizona.

By |2012-08-11T09:30:54-07:00August 11th, 2012|Marijuana Crimes, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Two AZ Medical Marijuana Patients Arrested for Growing More Plants than Allowed under Arizona’s Medical Marijuana Law

Maricopa County Attorney Warns Everybody in Maricopa County Not to Grow, Sell or Distribute Marijuana Because He Will Prosecute Violators for Felonies

The video below should be watched in its entirety by the types of people listed below who personally or in connection with any type of entity grow,  sell  or distribute marijuana (medical or otherwise) in Maricopa County, Arizona:

  • People who have a medical marijuana patient or caregiver card.
  • Owners of medical marijuana dispensaries and collectives.
  • Employees or independent contractors who provide  services to a medical  marijuana dispensary or collective.
  • Medical  directors of medical marijuana dispensaries.
  • Landlords who allow their real property to be used by a medical marijuana dispensary or collective.
  • Professionals  such as attorneys, accountants and tax preparers who provide services to a medical marijuana dispensary or collective.

In the video Maricopa County Attorney William Montgomery states:

Montgomery:  “Rather than allow people to take additional action an put themselves in jeopardy of prosecution at a later point in time it is more prudent now to let people know that their conduct is not authorized.”

Question:  “A patient growing pot at home is that person at risk of being prosecuted?”

Montgomery:  “Yes.  You cannot grow it.”

Question:  “Are employees of a dispensary at risk?

Montgomery:  “Yes”

Question:  “Are the owners of the business at risk?”

Montgomery:  “Yes”

Question:  “Would you open a dispensary right now?  Would you even work there?”

Montgomery:  “Absolutely not. . . . Part of my statements at this point in time is to literally help, help to protect those people from conducting any more business or taking another step in that direction which would jeopardize whatever resources they put into it as well as their own liberty.”

By |2012-08-09T21:06:52-07:00August 9th, 2012|Legal Issues, Marijuana Crimes, Stories & Articles, Video|Comments Off on Maricopa County Attorney Warns Everybody in Maricopa County Not to Grow, Sell or Distribute Marijuana Because He Will Prosecute Violators for Felonies

Arizona Governor Allows Attorney General Horne to Challenge Arizona’s Medical Marijuana Law

The Bugle: “Gov. Jan Brewer has signed a waiver that will allow Attorney General Tom Horne to try to close down the marijuana dispensaries that her state health department is in the process of licensing.  The move comes in the wake of Horne’s formal legal opinion that the state cannot legally permit anyone to sell marijuana, even only to those who have a doctor’s recommendation to use the drug. Horne said as long as the drug remains illegal under federal law, the state is powerless to authorize anything to the contrary. . . . Horne said he intends to legally intervene in a legal fight between Maricopa County and the owner of a clinic that wants to open a marijuana dispensary in Sun City.”

By |2017-02-12T07:39:20-07:00August 9th, 2012|Legal Issues, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Arizona Governor Allows Attorney General Horne to Challenge Arizona’s Medical Marijuana Law

Arizona Issues 97 Medical Marijuana Dispensary Registration Certificates

Yesterday the Arizona Department of Health Services conducted its lottery to pick “winners” to receive medical marijuana dispensary registration certificates in the areas that had more than one qualified applicant.  The winners must now open their dispensaries before their registration certificates expire.

  • Arizona RepublicArizona begins selecting medical-marijuana dispensaries.  “On Tuesday, the state Health Department issued 97 dispensary registration certificates from among 433 applicants, giving them the opportunity to sell marijuana and operate cultivation sites to grow it. . . . [Maricopa County Attorney Bill] Montgomery said Tuesday he will ask the judge in that case for a quick ruling on whether the state’s medical-marijuana program is legal under the federal Controlled Substance Act, which makes possession, sale or use of marijuana a crime. . . . [Montgomery] said, Horne’s legal opinion gives him the authority to prosecute dispensary operators. State Health Department employees also are at risk under federal law . . . . .’Any action that was taken by a state employee, if in fact any dispensaries open, was a federal crime’ .”
  • The Bugle:  Despite legal threat, state health dept. allocates medical marijuana dispensary bids.  “Two areas remain under legal dispute and the balance, mainly tribal lands, had no applicants at all.  By law, the state cannot identify the successful applicants or even the locations where they plan to operate. . . . But if Maricopa County Attorney Bill Montgomery gets his way, there won’t be any dispensaries by that point.  In fact, Montgomery told Capitol Media Services on Tuesday he hopes to get a court ruling that makes the entire 2010 voter-approved medical marijuana program disappear. That would mean marijuana cardholders would either have to give up the drug or face the risk of arrest.”
  • Verde Independent:  Attorney general taking medical marijuana law to state court.  “Attorney General Tom Horne said Monday that prosecutors are going to ask a state court to declare that the planned medical marijuana dispensaries are illegal and cannot be opened.  Horne told Capitol Media Services that federal law prohibits anyone from selling marijuana. Yet the state is planning to issue licenses that authorize dispensary operators to do just that.  ‘A state law cannot authorize a violation of federal law,’ he said.”

The Arizona Department of Health Services website contains video segments of the lottery and a Q & A with ADHS Director Will Humble.

By |2019-06-14T08:26:13-07:00August 8th, 2012|Dept Health Services, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Arizona Issues 97 Medical Marijuana Dispensary Registration Certificates

Tom Horne: Arizona Medical Marijuana Act Preempted by Federal Law, in Part

Phoenix New Times:  “Arizona should not authorize medical-marijuana dispensaries as voters intended because they would violate federal law, says state Attorney General Tom Horne. . . . Now, the question of whether Arizona gets dispensaries like Colorado is apparently in the hands of state judge who just doesn’t know it yet.”

By |2012-08-07T07:35:58-07:00August 7th, 2012|Legal Issues, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Tom Horne: Arizona Medical Marijuana Act Preempted by Federal Law, in Part

Arizona Marijuana Dispensaries Awarded via Bingo Machine

Azcentral.com:  ” In less than 12 hours, nearly 100 people will get the green light to open a medical marijuana dispensary. But 3TV has discovered those who applied for one won’t have to earn it, they’ll simply win it.  It’s been nearly two years since Arizona voters legalized marijuana and now the wait for the highly anticipated yet controversial dispensaries is over.  Using a bingo-like machine, 99 certificates will be handed out Tuesday morning. The winners will be chosen at random.”

By |2015-04-06T18:55:44-07:00August 7th, 2012|Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Arizona Marijuana Dispensaries Awarded via Bingo Machine

Medical Marijuana in Casa Grande: City Preparing for Pot Shop

TriValleyCentral.com:  “Casa Grande zoning, in any case, has proved something of a magnet for dispensary applicants. . . . ‘In Casa Grande, a special use permit isn’t needed for a dispensary. Instead, the city created a special medical marijuana zoning overlay near Casa Grande Regional Medical Center on East Florence Boulevard.’  Of the dozen applicants for a dispensary in the overlay district, seven are for a single address in a medical plaza. The building, east of the hospital on Salk Drive, is owned by the Gebran brothers. The family also owns U.S. Egg restaurants in Tempe and Scottsdale.”

By |2015-04-06T18:55:44-07:00August 7th, 2012|Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Medical Marijuana in Casa Grande: City Preparing for Pot Shop

Arizona Attorney General’s Opinion Kinda Corrects Arizona Governor & Concludes Arizona’s Medical Marijuana Act is Partially Preempted by Federal Law

Last week Arizona Governor Jan Brewer’s response to a letter from 13 Arizona County Attorneys that the Arizona Medical Marijuana Act was preempted by federal law was to say you legal types don’t know what you are talking about and “I am duty-bound to implement the AMMA.”  Now her lawyer says oops-e-dazey, not so fast.  In a press release issued today Arizona Attorney General Tom Horne said:

Arizona Attorney General Tom Horne issued the following statement in connection with an Opinion being issued today regarding the Arizona Medical Marijuana Act (AMMA) stating the law is pre-empted in part:

“I have received formal requests from State Representative John Kavanagh and Yavapai County Attorney Sheila Polk, as to whether the Arizona medical marijuana initiative is preempted by federal law. This past Friday, August 3rd, I received the same request from 13 of Arizona’s 15 county attorneys, including county attorneys of both political parties. The request from the 13 county attorneys stated: ‘your immediate action is requested in light of the pending licensing of dispensaries beginning on August 7th.’

The 13 county attorneys have clearly communicated their view that the AMMA is preempted by federal law.

I have taken seriously the request of the 13 county attorneys that immediate action is needed, and the Opinion is attached. The Opinion was prepared by professional attorneys entirely on the basis of legal precedent, without regard to policy considerations as to medical marijuana as an issue, and without regard to my views. This is a purely legal analysis, as is the duty of this office.

Two recent cases, one from California, and one from Oregon, hold that the state cannot ‘authorize’ actions that are forbidden under federal law. A state can, however, decriminalize marijuana under its own laws. These cases compel the Opinion being issued today.

The AMMA ‘authorizes’ dispensaries, and the growing of marijuana. Under the California and Oregon court decisions, those provisions would be preempted by federal law. However, the provisions of the AMMA that relate to patient and caregiver identification cards would not be preempted because they merely identify those individuals who are exempt from prosecution under state law for the possession or use of marijuana for medical purposes. The use of the cards for that purpose would not be preempted.

This is an Attorney General’s opinion, not a court order, and a court may or may not agree with this opinion. We expect that there will be a motion for accelerated resolution of this issue in a pending court case.

Accordingly, I have advised the Department of Health Services that the law does not prevent them from proceeding with the planned lottery on Tuesday, August 7, and the issuance of registration certificates. The receipt of a registration certificate does not give a certificate holder permission to open or operate a dispensary. Certificate holders must subsequently apply for approval to operate after having completed a number of additional requirements. Dispensary certificate holders are advised that it would be prudent to delay additional work and expenditures pending resolution of the preemption issue by a court, which I expect will be resolved in an accelerated manner.

Emphasis added.

Note to Prospective Arizona Medical Marijuana Dispensary Owners:  Read the last sentence of the above press release twice because it appears to me that the Arizona Attorney General is giving prospective Arizona medical marijuana dispensary owners legal advice.  Mr. Horne won’t stop the Arizona Department of Health Services from issuing dispensary registration certificates and moving forward with its rules that implement the parts of the AMMA that are preempted by federal  law, but he seems to suggest that a future court case will have more to say on the subject of the life or death of Arizona medical marijuana dispensaries.

Read the Attorney General’s August 6, 2012, Opinion, which states:

Is the Arizona Medical Marijuana Act (“the AMMA”) preempted by the federal Controlled Substances Act (“the CSA”)? . . . Yes, in part. . . . Because of federal prohibitions, those AMMA provisions and related rules that authorize any cultivating, selling, and dispensing of marijuana are preempted.

Emphasis added.

The following is the text of Will Humble’s blog post of today.  Mr. Humble is the Director of the Arizona Department of Health Services.

The AZ Attorney General issued an Opinion and a media release this afternoon about the Arizona Medical Marijuana Act.  The Opinion states, in part, that the voter approved Act is pre-empted by Federal Law – specifically the part that allows the cultivation, selling or distribution of marijuana.  It references 2 recent court cases that states cannot ‘authorize’ actions that are forbidden under federal law.

Today’s Opinion is just that, an Attorney General Opinion…  not a court order, and a court (or courts) may or may not agree.  Attorney General Horne has said in his media release today that he expects that there will be a motion for accelerated resolution of this issue in a pending court case.

The AGs Office also advised us this afternoon that today’s Opinion doesn’t prevent us from proceeding with tomorrow’s planned lottery on Tuesday, August 7, and the issuance of Registration Certificates- so we’ll be proceeding tomorrow as planned at 9 a.m.  I’m not sure how or whether today’s Opinion will impact the issuance of subsequent Operating Licenses for the folks that are allocated a Registration Certificate tomorrow morning.

 So, at least for now, we’ll take it one day at a time.

Player Update

For those who are keeping score at home, here’s the latest stats in the game of Arizona’s wack-a-mole medical marijuana dispensary industry:

  • Arizona Governor Jan Brewer:  Opposes the AMMA, but will  allow it to be implemented because “though the Department of Justice has prosecuted a select number of large medical-marijuana operations in California and other states, the federal government’s position remains unclear with regard to the AMMA and participation in this law by Arizona State employees.”
  • Arizona Attorney General Tom  Horne:  “AMMA provisions and related rules that authorize any cultivating, selling, and dispensing of marijuana are preempted,” but go for it prospective dispensary owners and Arizona Department of Health Services.
  • Will Humble, Director of the Arizona Department of Health Services:  “The AGs Office also advised us this afternoon that today’s Opinion doesn’t prevent us from proceeding with tomorrow’s planned lottery on Tuesday, August 7, and the issuance of Registration Certificates- so we’ll be proceeding”
  • Gila County Attorney Daisy Flores:  “Arizona voters determined that dispensaries should be permitted if in compliance with our Arizona law, as county attorney, I must respect the will of the people.”
  • Arizona Attorney Ryan Hurley:  “even in California, where there is a lot of uncertainty, these notions that the sky is going to fall just don’t hold up.”
  • Arizona Republic columnist E. J. Montini:  “federal authorities, who have expressed no interest in prosecuting medical-marijuana cases”
  • 13 Arizona County Attorneys:  The AMMA is preempted by federal law.
  • Former U.S. Attorney for the District of Arizona Ann Birmingham Sheel:  “compliance with the AMMA and Arizona regulations will not provide a safe harbor or immunity from federal prosecution for anyone involved in the cultivation and distribution of marijuana. . . . state employees who conduct activities authorized by the AMMA are not immune from liability under the CSA.”
  • Former U.S. Attorney for Arizona Dennis Burke:  “The United States Attorney’s Office for the District of Arizona (“the USAO”) will continue to vigorously prosecute individuals and organizations that participate in unlawful manufacturing, distribution and marketing activity involving marijuana, even if such activities are permitted under state law. . . . The public should understand, however, that even clear and unambiguous compliance with AMMA does not render possession or distribution of marijuana lawful under federal statute.”
  • U.S. Department of Justice:  “The federal government will ‘vigorously enforce’ federal laws against those who ‘operate and facilitate large marijuana production facilities and marijuana production facilities involved in the cultivation, sale and distribution of marijuana, even if purportedly for medical purposes’.”

Half Time Score

AMMA Dispensaries Good Team: 5.5
(1 each for Gov. Brewer, Will Humble, Daisy Flores, Ryan Hurley & EJ Montini + .5 for AG Horne)
vs.
AMMA Dispensaries Bad Team:  115.5
(.5 for AG Horne + 13 county attorneys + 2 former U.S. attorneys + 100 because the DOJ is the DOJ).

By |2015-04-06T18:55:44-07:00August 6th, 2012|Legal Issues, Stories & Articles, Will Humble Speaks|Comments Off on Arizona Attorney General’s Opinion Kinda Corrects Arizona Governor & Concludes Arizona’s Medical Marijuana Act is Partially Preempted by Federal Law

10 More Colorado Pot Dispensaries Near Schools Ordered To Shut Down Or Move

Huffington Post:  “On Friday, U.S. Attorney John Walsh’s office issued letters to the owners of 10 medical marijuana dispensaries in Colorado that are within 1,000 feet of schools notifying them that they have 45 days to shut down, move their business or face federal enforcement action. . . . This is the third wave of letters Walsh has sent out to Colorado dispensares deemed too close to schools. In January, the first round of letters were sent to 23 medical marijuana businesses and in March another 25 letters were sent out. . . . a total of 47 of Colorado’s medical marijuana dispensaries have now been shuttered since the crackdown began in January”

See also “Medical marijuana: Ten dispensaries targeted in third wave of U.S. Attorney closure letters.”  The below letter was sent earlier this year, but the U.S. Attorney’s office in Colorado said the text of the current letter is identical except for the dates and addressees.

John Walsh Second Wave Dispensary Letter

By |2012-08-25T08:05:24-07:00August 6th, 2012|Colorado News, Federal Dispensary Attacks, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on 10 More Colorado Pot Dispensaries Near Schools Ordered To Shut Down Or Move

Tax Court Decision Vaporizes the Vapor Room

On August 2, 2012, the U.S. Tax Court issued its decision in the case of Martin Olive vs. Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service.  Martin Olive, a young man unconcerned with the normal formalities of operating a business, owns a relatively well known medical marijuana dispensary in San Francisco, California, called the Vapor Room Herbal Center that used to operate in a 1,250 square foot store in a low income neighborhood.  The Tax Court said that Mr. Martin “consciously opted not to keep adequate books and records and that action was in reckless or conscious disregard of rules or regulations.”  The Vapor Room was in the news recently because it announced that it was going out of business.

Martin Olive started the Vapor Room in 2004 and operated it as a sole proprietorship rather than through an entity that would protect him from the debts and liabilities of the business.  Martin operated the business as a cash business and apparently did not keep records of any kind other than journals written by him that contained income and expense information.  The IRS assessed deficiencies against Martin Olive of $692,501 for 2004 and $1,199,814 for 2005 plus accuracy-related penalties to $138,500 for 2004 and $239,963 for 2005. On his federal income tax returns Martin Olive reported that the Vapor Room’s “principal business” is “Retail Sales” and that its product is “Herbal.”

The court ruled:

  • Martin Olive under-reported his gross income.
  • He could deduct his cost of goods sold (COGS) in an amount greater than the IRS allowed.
  • Section 280E of the Internal Revenue Code prevented the deduction of any of his business expenses because his only business was selling marijuana.
  • Martin Olive is liable for the accuracy-related penalties.

The Tax Court was not impressed by witnesses who testified on behalf of the Vapor Room.  The Court said:

“Petitioner’s testimony and the testimony of his other witnesses was rehearsed, insincere and unreliable. We do not rely on petitioner’s testimony to support his positions in this case, except to the extent his testimony is corroborated by reliable documentary evidence. We also do not rely on the uncorroborated testimony of petitioner’s other witnesses, three of whom are (or were) patrons of the Vapor Room and all of whom are closely and inextricably connected with the medical marijuana industry and with a desired furtherance of that movement.”

The Court found that Martin Olive’s gross receipts for the were $1,967,956 om 2004 and $3,301,898 in 2005.

Cost of Goods Sold

The case is a road map for how medical marijuana dispensaries should not conduct their businesses.  For example, the self-prepared journals in which Martin Olive wrote his income and expenses were ignored by the Court as proof of any expenses.  The Court said:

“Petitioner argues nonetheless that the ledgers alone are sufficient substantiation for taxpayers operating in the medical marijuana industry because, he states, that industry “shun[s] formal ‘substantiation’ in the form of receipts.” We disagree with petitioner that the ledgers standing alone are sufficient substantiation.  The ledgers did not specifically identify the marijuana vendors or reflect any marijuana that was received or given away. The ledgers neither were independently prepared nor bore sufficient indicia of reliability or trustworthiness. The substantiation rules require a taxpayer to maintain sufficient reliable records to allow the Commissioner to verify the taxpayer’s income and expenditures. . . .

Neither Congress nor the Commissioner has prescribed a rule stating that a medical marijuana dispensary may meet that substantiation requirement merely by maintaining a self-prepared ledger listing the amounts and general categories of its expenditures. It is not this Court’s role to prescribe the special substantiation rule that petitioner desires for medical marijuana dispensaries and we decline to do so. . . .

Petitioner consciously chose to transact the Vapor Room’s business primarily in cash. He also chose not to keep supporting documentation for the Vapor Room’s expenditures. He did so at his own peril. . . . Petitioner asserts that he minimized the Vapor Room’s use of checks because he did not want his bank to know that the Vapor Room was a medical marijuana dispensary. We find that assertion incredible, especially given that petitioner informed the bank that his business was named ‘Vapor Room’. . . .

Petitioner informs us that California did not allow medical marijuana dispensaries to earn a profit for the years at issue. The need to report no profit may improperly cause a dispensary to understate gross receipts or to overstate expenditures. We are especially wary here, where petitioner by his own admission understated his gross receipts and took steps to disguise his cash withdrawals from his business to conceal them from his employees”

Martin Olive did win one big victory.  Despite lacking any records of the cost of goods sold and saying it didn’t believe his expert witnesses, the Court accepted the testimony of Henry C. Levy, C.P.A. that the average COGS of a medical marijuana dispensary is 75.16% of its gross receipts despite stating that “we generally found Mr. Levy to be unreliable” and “his testimony improperly consisted mainly of legal opinions and conclusions.”

Section 280E

Section 280E of the Internal Revenue Code provides that a taxpayer may not deduct any amount for a trade or business where the “trade or business (or the activities which comprise such trade or business) consists of trafficking in controlled substances.  Selling marijuana is a controlled substance for the purposes of Section 280E.  Martin Olive argued that the Vapor Room that in addition to selling marijuana the Vapor Room operated the separate business of “care-giving.”  Unlike the Tax Court case of Californians Helping to Alleviate Med. Problems, Inc. v. Commissioner (CHAMP), where the Court found that CHAMP did operate a separate business and allowed deductions for expenses of that business, the Court in this case found no evidence that Martin Olive had any business other than selling marijuana.

The Court’s discussion of why it found that CHAMP operated two businesses and the Vapor Room did not is instructive for all medical marijuana dispensaries.

“The record establishes that the Vapor Room is not the same type of operation as the medical marijuana dispensary in CHAMP that we found to have two businesses. The differences between the operations are almost too numerous to list.  The dispensary there was operated exclusively for charitable, educational and scientific purposes and its income was slightly less than its expenses. . . . The director there was well experienced in health services and he operated the dispensary with caregiving as the primary feature and the dispensing of medical marijuana (with instructions on how to best consume it) as a secondary feature. . . . Seventy-two percent of the CHAMP dispensary’s employees (18 out of 25) worked exclusively in its caregiving business and the dispensary provided its caregiving services regularly, extensively and substantially independent of its providing medical marijuana. . . . It rented space at a church for peer group meetings and yoga classes and the church did not allow marijuana on the church’s premises. . . . It provided its low-income members with hygiene supplies and with daily lunches consisting of salads, fruit, water, soda and hot food. . . . Its members, approximately 47% of whom suffered from AIDS, paid a single membership fee for the right to receive caregiving services and medical marijuana from the taxpayer. . . . The names of the dispensaries are even diametrically different.  The name of the dispensary there, ‘Californians Helping To Alleviate Medical Problems,’ stresses the dispensary’s caregiving mission. The name of the dispensary here, ‘The Vapor Room Herbal Center,’ stresses the sale and consumption (through vaporization) of marijuana.”

The opinion does not state how much Martin Olive owes for 2004 and 2005, but it must be a big number.  Also unmentioned is whether the IRS audited Martin Olive for years after 2005.  I suspect that it did because of what it found in its 2004 and 2005 audits.

For more on this case read “Tax deductions for medical pot business go up in smoke, court rules” and “Bad News for Medical Marijuana Dispensaries (and Especially for the Vapor Room).”

By |2019-06-14T08:28:43-07:00August 5th, 2012|California News, Stories & Articles, Tax Issues|Comments Off on Tax Court Decision Vaporizes the Vapor Room

Justice Department Alerts Public about Fraudulent Marijuana Dispenary Spam Email

The following is the text of an notice posted on the Department of Justice’s website by Laura E. Duffy, U.S. Attorney for Southern District of Arizon:

Justice Department Urges Public Not to Respond to Email

Please be advised that a bogus e-mail is being distributed alerting the recipients that they have been subpoenaed before the Grand Jury in the United States District in San Diego. These Subpoenas are not genuine and were not issued by this court. Please disregard them and do not open any links within the e-mail.

THESE EMAIL MESSAGES ARE A HOAX. DO NOT RESPOND.

The Department of Justice did not send these unsolicited email messages—and would not send such messages to the public via email. Similar hoaxes have been recently perpetrated in the names of various governmental entities, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Federal Trade Commission, and the Internal Revenue Service.

Email users should be especially wary of unsolicited warning messages that purport to come from U.S. governmental agencies directing them to click on file attachments or to provide sensitive personal information.

These spam email messages are bogus and should be immediately deleted. Computers may be put at risk simply by an attempt to examine these messages for signs of fraud. It is possible that by “double-clicking” on attachments to these messages, recipients will cause malicious software – e.g., viruses, keystroke loggers, or other Trojan horse programs – to be launched on their computers.

Do not open any attachment to such messages. Delete the e-mail. Empty the deleted items folder.

For more on this story read “Hoax Email Claims US Attorney Laura Duffy Now Targeting Storefront Pharmacies.” and “US Attorney Calls Pharmacy Crackdown Letters A ‘Hoax’.”

By |2015-04-06T18:55:43-07:00August 5th, 2012|California News, Federal Dispensary Attacks, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Justice Department Alerts Public about Fraudulent Marijuana Dispenary Spam Email

Ahwatukee Has Single Applicant for Medical-marijuana Dispensary

Arizona Republic:  “For most of Arizona’s 126 so-called community health analysis areas, multiple applicants are seeking state permission to sell marijuana for treatment of medical conditions. The Arizona Department of Health Services will conduct a lottery for those zones on Tuesday. Ahwatukee, which is among several zones in Phoenix, had only one dispensary application.”

By |2012-08-05T07:41:56-07:00August 5th, 2012|Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Ahwatukee Has Single Applicant for Medical-marijuana Dispensary

Arizona Medical Marijuana Shops Awaiting Lottery

Arizona Republic:  “The Arizona Department of Health Services will hold a much-anticipated — and highly controversial — lottery on Tuesday to select medical-marijuana dispensaries.  State officials have decided to move forward with licensing the dispensaries, even as 13 county attorneys have urged Gov. Jan Brewer to halt the process and federal prosecutors have moved to shut down the nation’s largest medical-marijuana dispensary in California. The Los Angeles City Council, meanwhile, ordered each of the city’s 762 dispensaries to shut down.  Arizona health officials received 486 medical-marijuana dispensary applications from individuals or businesses that want to set up shop in 99 of the state’s 126 designated dispensary areas.”

By |2012-08-05T07:45:15-07:00August 4th, 2012|Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Arizona Medical Marijuana Shops Awaiting Lottery

Will Humble Explains Tuesday’s Dispensary Lottery

On August 3, 2012, Will Humble, Director of the Arizona Department of Health Services, posted the following on his blog:

Next Tuesday (August 7) is “Selection Tuesday” for our medical marijuana dispensary applicants.  By the end of the day, we’ll have whittled the initial pool of 486 medical marijuana dispensary applications down to 99.  We won’t be allocating the full allotment of 126 Registration Certificates on Tuesday because 27 of our Community Health Analysis Areas had no applicant at all- leaving 99 Community Health Analysis Areas with at least 1 applicant.  About 75 of the 99 had 2 or more applicants- so we’ll have about 75 drawings on Tuesday.  We’ll post an updated summary of how many eligible applications there are by district on our website before the drawing.

We’ll be using a device that blows pre-labeled ping pong type balls inside of a clear cage to randomly select the successful applicant in each competitive area.  We’ll go CHAA by CHAA starting at #1 and continuing through #126.  The agenda for the day is posted on our website (the first selection will begin at 9 am and we’ll finish around 1 pm).  Applicants will be e-mailed the number of their ball(s) in advance…  and all applicants will be notified of the selection results electronically by Wednesday.  The successful applicants will receive their Registration Certificate after they complete their required Dispensary Agent paperwork.

The process will be webcast live on this internet URL and the entire event will be recorded and posted on the ADHS dispensary website.  Because of the large number of applicants and the limited capacity of our facility, credentialed media, a few Agency staff and our independent auditors will be the only folks that’ll be invited to the selection location.  The Act doesn’t allow us to identify the applicants by name or even business name- so we’ll use application numbers to identify the successful applicants.  We’ll also post a table of the successful applicants (by application number) on our dispensary website by the close of business on Tuesday.

Everybody that’s allocated a Dispensary Registration Certificate will have a little less than a year to build out and get an “Approval to Operate”.  Keep in mind that an application for Approval to Operate a dispensary is not complete until we get a written notice that the dispensary and cultivation facility (if it’s in the business plan) is ready for an inspection and they meet our criteria.  Our team recently put together some tools to help Registration Certificate holders meet our Approval to Operate criteria, including an Approval to Operate Application Checklist, Approval to Operate Application Instructions, and the Dispensary Inspection Checklist

By |2019-06-14T08:26:13-07:00August 3rd, 2012|Dept Health Services, Stories & Articles, Will Humble Speaks|Comments Off on Will Humble Explains Tuesday’s Dispensary Lottery

Medical Marijuana Dispensary Lottery Coming Tuesday, and Will Be Streamed Live Online

Phoenix New Times:  “If you follow Arizona’s medical marijuana program as closely as sports fans follow their teams, this one’s for you — the dispensary lottery will be streaming live online Tuesday.  The applicants have different odds of obtaining the approval to start up a dispensary on ‘Selection Tuesday,’ as there are various amounts of applicants in each of the 126 regions, called ‘Community Health Analysis Areas.’  . . . Therefore, 387 of the 486 people who applied for the chance to run a dispensary will come out as losers on Tuesday if their ball doesn’t come out of the device known as the ‘Atom Action Bubble Top Bingo Blower’.”

By |2012-08-05T07:55:47-07:00August 3rd, 2012|Dept Health Services, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Medical Marijuana Dispensary Lottery Coming Tuesday, and Will Be Streamed Live Online

Arizona to Award Marijuana Dispensary Licenses

Verde Independent:  “State officials will award the first-ever licenses to legally sell marijuana this coming week under what one prosecutor said is a cloud of having them shut down the moment they open their doors.  The big day comes Tuesday when state health officials will pull out a device most resembling the machine used to pick lottery numbers.”

By |2017-02-12T07:39:19-07:00August 3rd, 2012|Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Arizona to Award Marijuana Dispensary Licenses

Medical-Marijuana Companies Won’t be Thwarted by Location of “Reverend” Al Sobol’s Church

Phoenix New Times:  “A judge has refused to overturn a decision by Fountain Hills to authorize medical-marijuana dispensaries near an alleged church run by by medical-marijuana marketer Al Sobol.  Following a hearing on Tuesday, Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Katherine Cooper ruled that the Town of Fountain Hills did not act unreasonably in issuing preliminary zoning approval to several companies and individuals, even though the addresses of the potential dispensaries are located within 500 feet of Sobol’s church. Sobol has mail-order minister credentials from the Universal Life Church.”

By |2012-08-03T07:28:30-07:00August 3rd, 2012|AZ Marijuana Law Lawsuits, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Medical-Marijuana Companies Won’t be Thwarted by Location of “Reverend” Al Sobol’s Church

Tax Court in Olive vs Commissioner Allows Deductions for Cost of Goods Sold

On August 2, 2014, the Tax Court held that: (i) Martin Olive underreported gross receipts from the sales of medical marijuana by the Vapor Room medical marijuana dispensary, (ii) IRS Section 280E prevented him from deducting business related expenses, and (iii) he was liable for accuracy-related penalties.  The court did allow Olive to deduct his cost of goods sold.  The case is Olive v. Commissioner, 139 T.C. No. 2 (Aug. 2, 2012).  The court said:

“A vaporizer is an expensive apparatus that extracts from marijuana its principal active component and allows the user to inhale vapor rather than smoke. Petitioner chose the name of his business to publicize that the Vapor Room had the requisite equipment to allow patrons to vaporize marijuana there. …

Petitioner’s testimony and the testimony of his other witnesses was rehearsed, insincere and unreliable. We do not rely on petitioner’s testimony to support his positions in this case, except to the extent his testimony is corroborated by reliable documentary evidence. We also do not rely on the uncorroborated testimony of petitioner’s other witnesses, three of whom are (or were) patrons of the Vapor Room and all of whom are closely and inextricably connected with the medical marijuana industry and with a desired furtherance of that movement. …

We hold that the Vapor Room’s gross receipts for the respective years were $1,967,956 and $3,301,898. …

We conclude that the Vapor Room’s COGS for each year at issue equals 75.16% of the Vapor Room’s gross receipts for the year, as further adjusted to take into account our finding that petitioner gave away 6.5% of the Vapor Room’s purchases. …

The parties agree that § 280E disallows deductions only for the expenses of a business and not for its COGS. … [We] reject petitioner’s contention that § 280E does not apply because the Vapor Room was a legitimate operation under California law. We have previously held that a California medical marijuana dispensary’s dispensing of medical marijuana pursuant to the CCUA was “trafficking” within the meaning of § 280E. [Californians Helping to Alleviate Med. Problems, Inc. v. Commissioner (CHAMP), 128 T.C. 173 (2007).] That holding applies here with full force. …

Respondent argues that petitioner is liable for the accuracy-related penalty to the extent he has understated the Vapor Room’s gross receipts and failed to substantiate the Vapor Room’s COGS and expenses. Petitioner’s sole argument in brief is that the penalty does not apply because, he states, any inaccuracy underlying an understatement was “accidental, not substantial, and/or not negligent on the part of the taxpayer.” Petitioner asserts that the Vapor Room was his first business and that he was not instructed on the proper way to keep the books and records of a business. We agree with respondent that the accuracy-related penalty applies in this case.”

By |2019-06-14T08:28:34-07:00August 2nd, 2012|Stories & Articles, Tax Issues|Comments Off on Tax Court in Olive vs Commissioner Allows Deductions for Cost of Goods Sold

Feds Shut Down Two More San Francisco Medical Marijuana Dispensaries

NBC Bay Area:  “A pair of San Francisco prominent medical marijuana businesses closed their doors Tuesday, a sign of the federal government’s recent crackdown on medical cannabis dispensaries.  HopeNet and the Vapor Room announced they would cease operations in response to threatening letters sent to the business’ landlords by the federal government.  ‘The Justice Department sent our landlord one of those nasty letters,’ said HopeNet co-founder Catherine Smith. ‘So this is our D-Day, we have to leave’. . . . Since November, the Justice Department has sent out 600 letters across California threatening landlords who rent space to medical marijuana operations.”

By |2015-07-18T09:20:58-07:00August 1st, 2012|California News, Federal Dispensary Attacks, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Feds Shut Down Two More San Francisco Medical Marijuana Dispensaries

Federal Prosecutors’ Threats to Seize Land Close Three Washington Medical Marijuana Dispensaries

The Wenatchee World:  “Three medical marijuana shops in the Wenatchee area have closed after federal prosecutors threatened to seize the properties and to fine or prosecute the landlords.  Medical marijuana store operator Eric Cooper says the letters last week from Eastern Washington U.S. Attorney Michael Ormsby prompted three existing dispensaries to close immediately.  He says the fourth shop in the area is staying open a little longer but also intends to close.”

By |2015-04-06T18:55:43-07:00August 1st, 2012|Federal Dispensary Attacks, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Federal Prosecutors’ Threats to Seize Land Close Three Washington Medical Marijuana Dispensaries
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