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Support slim for pot provider’s challenge of raids’ constitutionality

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HELENA, Mont. – A Montana medical marijuana provider staring at an 80-year prison sentence has become something of a martyr among pot advocates, but he’s not finding much support for his constitutional challenge of the federal raids that landed him in jail.

Chris Williams was the only provider among those indicted after the 2011 raids on more than a dozen medical marijuana operations across Montana who rejected multiple plea deals and insisted on a jury trial on the eight drug trafficking and weapons charges he faced.

Williams also is the lead plaintiff in a civil lawsuit that claims he and the other providers were following Montana’s medical marijuana laws and the raids were an unconstitutional usurpation of local government and police powers by the federal government.

Williams lost both cases in a one-two punch. In January, U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy dismissed the civil lawsuit, saying the federal Controlled Substances Act prevails over Montana’s laws because of the Constitution’s Supremacy Clause.

Then in September, Williams was found guilty on all eight criminal counts after the jury was prevented from hearing anything about Montana’s medical marijuana laws.

Now Williams faces 80 years or more in prison when he is sentenced on the criminal charges Jan. 4. His case has drawn the attention and outrage of pro-medical marijuana advocates who say he is the victim of overzealous prosecution, and an online White House petition asking President Barack Obama to pardon Williams has gathered more than 18,800 signatures in eight days.

Meanwhile, Williams’ attorney in the civil lawsuit has taken the constitutional challenge of the raids to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Attorney Paul Livingston said in a recent interview that for all the attention Williams has received in his criminal case, his civil case has been ignored by Montana’s marijuana advocates and the attorneys who defended other indicted marijuana providers.

“He has been made a martyr,” Livingston said. “I just don’t understand how it has been ignored as it is.”

Williams’ constitutional challenge says he and the other provider plaintiffs were running their medical marijuana operations openly, honestly and in compliance with state law. When federal agents raided those operations to enforce the Controlled Substances Act, which lists marijuana as a Schedule I drug, the government interfered with the rights and powers given to the states by the Constitution’s 10th Amendment, they claim.

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