Kentucky Governor's Order Protects Medical Marijuana Users From Prosecution for Possession
To be eligible for a pardon, patients will have to obtain cannabis from other states and document their diagnoses and purchases.

The 37 states that allow medical use of marijuana do not include Kentucky, where polling suggests that 90 percent of residents favor that policy. Because state legislators have not delivered a reform that the vast majority of voters say they want, Gov. Andy Beshear this week issued a conditional pardon aimed at protecting people who use marijuana for medical purposes from prosecution for simple possession.
Beshear, a Democrat in a state where Republicans control the legislature, presented his pardon as a commonsensical response to public opinion and the example set by other states. "Kentuckians throughout the Commonwealth suffer from a multitude of medical conditions from which they deserve relief," he said in his executive order. "In Kentucky, despite polling that suggests 90 percent (90%) of Kentucky adults support legalizing medical cannabis, any amount of cannabis possession, cultivation and distribution remains criminalized. Past efforts to legalize medical cannabis through legislation have failed in the General Assembly, including during the 2020 Regular Session and the 2022 Regular Session when bills passed the House of Representatives in bipartisan fashion, but did not reach debate in the Senate."
Contrary to what you may have read, Beshear's executive order does not "legalize" medical marijuana. It does not even necessarily mean that patients who use cannabis for symptom relief won't be arrested for marijuana possession, a misdemeanor punishable by up to 45 days in jail and a $250 fine. But it does mean that such individuals won't be prosecuted for that offense, provided they meet four conditions:
1. They have to buy marijuana outside of Kentucky in a jurisdiction where such sales are legal.
2. They have to retain a receipt documenting that purchase.
3. They have to buy no more than eight ounces.
4. They need a "written certification" from a doctor saying they have been diagnosed with one of 21 listed conditions, which include cancer, epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, AIDS, glaucoma, muscular dystrophy, and "intractable pain."
Effective January 1, patients who meet those criteria will receive a pardon for simple possession of marijuana. But that pardon is not a license to grow medical marijuana or to obtain it in Kentucky or any other state where it remains illegal. Possible sources of cannabis for Kentucky patients include Missouri, Illinois, Ohio, and West Virginia, neighboring states where medical marijuana is legal.
"To get the pardon," notes WKRC, the CBS affiliate in Cincinnati, "you will need to be charged and possibly arrested." Rob Sanders, commonwealth's attorney for Kenton County, worries that Beshear's order will cause confusion for police, prosecutors, and patients. "It's going to be hell on prosecutors and courts to try and sort out the mess created by haphazardly repealing a law without the use of the legislature," he told WKRC.
As for patients, Sanders said, "You still get handcuffed. You still get taken to jail. You still get booked into jail. I mean, you bond out of jail pretty fast if your only charge is possession of marijuana. You know, there's a lot of folks who won't realize that all this is going to take place. They think they've just got [a] get-out-of-jail-free card, and that's not what's going to happen."
Then again, police could use their discretion to refrain from arresting people for marijuana possession when they have the documentation required for a pardon. While a patient in that situation would not technically receive a pardon, he would still benefit from Beshear's order.
"Kentuckians suffering from chronic and terminal conditions are going to be able to get the treatment they need without living in fear of a misdemeanor," Beshear said in a press release. But he added that his pardon is "not a substitute for much-needed legislation to fully legalize medical cannabis." He said he would "work with lawmakers this upcoming session to push for full legalization of medical cannabis," which "would further provide relief for those suffering, fuel job growth and support Kentucky's farmers."
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There's no such thing as medical cannabis. Even autocorrect doesn't like it. Tries to turn it into medical cannibalism.
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A medical cannibalism exemption applies if your neighbor is diagnosed as being annoying.
I had a medical cannibal as a neighbor once. Man, did I get sick of listening to his lectors!
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Is nazi buzzkill listed among the 21 eligible conditions?
Well he didn't go far enough, he should've pardoned everyone that has ever been arrested for possession in the state. Still it's a good start though, no republican governor would've done this. And maybe this will provide a path for more Democrats to get elected to the state legislature, they can run on legalizing medical marijuana. We can only hope that more Democratic governors like Beshear get elected in the south.
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Go get ‘em tiger!
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What? That can't be. All I hear is the Democrats are the party of big govt and being in your business where those Republicans are small government and want to leave you alone.
They have to buy marijuana outside of Kentucky in a jurisdiction where such sales are legal.
And then CROSS STATE LINES!
Which makes it *two* federal crimes.
And transport alone is enough to get the feds to sit up.
Which makes KY’s governor an accomplice! So this makes him guilty of federal conspiracy to distribute narcotics laws.
"1. They have to buy marijuana outside of Kentucky in a jurisdiction where such sales are legal."
Great, you just took what would have been a state or local level misdemeanor and made it a federal offence.
"polling suggests that 90 percent of residents favor that policy. Because state legislators have not delivered a reform that the vast majority of voters say they want"
Do the people of Kentucky not have a petition / referendum process? That's how we got it through in Missouri.
And oddly, even though polls showed that somewhere around 67% of Missourians were in favor, only 53% of them actually voted for it when the issue was put to the ballot.
this was my immediate reaction. Make it federal and make sure they have documentation (receipt) that its federal. what could go wrong??
Most eastern states don't have voter initiatives at the statewide level.
Interesting to know. I'm from / live in one of the first states west of the Mississippi river.
But those have played a very important role in making California what it is today!
Really don't know what to make of this. My libertarian side likes this as far as it goes. My wife has a medical card here in Illinois and the reefer has improved her life greatly. On the other hand we just lived through 2 years of governors bypassing legislators and imposing Covid tyranny through executive orders. Hopefully the KY legislators will codify or at least allow a referendum on the issue. At this point I'm a no vote on this executive order.
it's a trap!
Maybe the governor wants to use a med mj patient as a pawn in a game of chicken with the feds over mj policy.
maybe
So you have to buy it, gifts don't count. Do any of the adjoining states allow non-residents to buy med or non-med mj?
Yes. Illinois permits out of state purchases, albeit it is more restrictive on quantity than on in-state resident purchases. Fairly certain Illinois is the only State contiguous to Kentucky to permit recreational purchases. Michigan and Colorado also permit purchases by non-residents. I'm not sure there is any jurisdiction where in-state residency is required, but there are some that have different quantity limits for out-of-staters.
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If you’re going to stretch the law to get humanitarian relief for MJ users, it would be more plausible to just proclaim that the legal Doctrine of Necessity allows sick people to get relief through the reefer.
I don’t know whether that approach would be 100% legal according to the best authorities, but it has a better chance of being legal than promising pardons in advance to people who will commit crimes in the future.
That promising-pardons-in-advance approach seems, shall we say, in tension with Section 15 of the Kentucky Constitution: "No power to suspend laws shall be exercised unless by the General Assembly or its authority."
Ask an attorney in your jurisdiction if the necessity defense is right for you:
https://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/what-the-necessity-defense.html
Walls are closing in, right Sullum? The walls are closing in.
Aaaaaany moment now.
I really appreciate Sullum's articles trying to put fascist foot-dragging in a less depressing light. But this is a choice between alternatives, like nuclear power v. blackouts is a choice. Only here the alternatives are to defend individual rights OR let superstitious rednecks have cops rob and shoot people. To Budweiser brainwashees and drys, if a cop shoots and kills a hippie or
nayg...Person of Color, like Justice Clarence, the victim is welcomed by Jesus. So it's like preserving slavery in order to Christianize (or is it Euthanize?) the dissolute, uncovered heathen--like in the original Constitution, Section 2, Article 3.I didn't even know that cannabis can be prescribed for people suffering from cancer, does it actually help? Well, I think it helps coping with pain, but that's it. I can tell you that when I was diagnosed with colon cancer, I started looking for clinics on Airomedical website, searching for more info on the internet about various chemotherapy medicines and reading stories of other people fighting cancer, and for some reason, I never stumbled upon cannabis there, but maybe it started being common not so long ago.