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

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That amendment says powers not granted to the federal government by the Constitution and not prohibited by the states are reserved to the states or the people.

Livingston said Judge Molloy should have held a trial on the lawsuit instead of dismissing the claim outright for lack of a claim. Molloy said in his ruling, “We are all bound by federal law, like it or not.”

The appeal has yet to be scheduled for hearing before the 9th Circuit.

Just one medical marijuana advocacy group, the Montana Cannabis Industry Association, has filed court documents in support of the appeal. Association president Chris Lindsey said his organization is likely not to become more involved than that.

Lindsey, who was Williams’ partner in Montana Cannabis and was convicted in a plea deal with federal prosecutors, said the group’s focus and resources are tied up in a separate lawsuit that aims to revoke medical marijuana restrictions passed by the state Legislature last year.

“I think it’s a worthy effort, bu the MTCIA decided to focus its attention on the case pending (in state court),” Lindsey said. “There’s only so much we can really afford to get involved in.”

Others say it is quixotic to hope for a court ruling such as the one Williams and Livingston are seeking, and that say other avenues may be more effective, such as the voter initiatives passed in Washington and Colorado allowing the recreational use of marijuana.

Robert Raich, a California attorney who brought two medical marijuana cases that were rejected by the Supreme Court, said he has concluded from his own experience that marijuana laws won’t be changed through the judicial process.

“The War on Drugs is too sacrosanct a sacred cow for the courts to weigh in favor,” Raich said. “I think we can make better progress by doing something other than filing lawsuits.”

But he said he is sympathetic to Williams’ plight and called the marijuana crackdown in Montana the harshest among the states.

“Montana is the worst,” he said. “The federal government has attacked medical cannabis with a vengeance in Montana more than any other state.”


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