Kentucky's Governor Shields Medical Marijuana Users From Prosecution
Gov. Andy Beshear issued a conditional pardon aimed at protecting people who use marijuana for medical purposes from criminal prosecution.

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 has issued a conditional pardon aimed at protecting people who use marijuana for medical purposes from prosecution.
"Kentuckians throughout the Commonwealth suffer from a multitude of medical conditions from which they deserve relief," Beshear, a Democrat, said in his November 15 executive order. He noted the failure of "past efforts to legalize medical cannabis" in Kentucky's Republican-controlled legislature, including two bills that passed the House of Representatives with bipartisan support but died in the Senate.
Contrary to what some news outlets reported, Beshear's order did 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 several criteria.
To be eligible for the pardon, patients need a doctor's "written certification" that they have been diagnosed with one of 21 listed conditions, which include cancer, epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, AIDS, glaucoma, muscular dystrophy, and "intractable pain." They must buy no more than eight ounces of marijuana outside of Kentucky in a jurisdiction where such sales are legal, which they need to verify with receipts.
The pardon is not a license to grow medical marijuana or to obtain it in Kentucky or any other state where it remains illegal. Cannabis is legally available in several neighboring or nearby states, although some of them do not allow purchases by nonresidents.
Rob Sanders, commonwealth's attorney for Kenton County, warned that Beshear's order would cause confusion for patients, police, and prosecutors. Patients will "still get handcuffed" and "get taken to jail," he told a Cincinnati TV station, although they will subsequently have a chance to show they qualify for the pardon.
Alternatively, police can use their discretion to refrain from arresting people for marijuana possession when they have the requisite documentation. While patients in that situation would not technically receive pardons, they 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. But he added that his pardon is "not a substitute for much-needed legislation to fully legalize medical cannabis."
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This state had a legislature unwilling to advance the idea that adults were capable of making adult decisions regarding marijuana so the citizens made it legal. If Kentuckians wants this, go get the signatures and put it on the ballot yourselves.
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No. At least not state-wide.
They're just chicken.
Does Kentucky have a Libertarian party? Or just anotherTrump-Mises-Afd Make Altruism Grate Anschluss? It even half of this alleged 90% vote, there sits opportunity waiting for a libertarian or objectivist party to employ spoiler votes to repeal bad laws.
That might be nice if Kentucky allowed for state-wide ballot initiatives.
He noted the failure of "past efforts to legalize medical cannabis" in Kentucky's Republican-controlled legislature, including two bills that passed the House of Representatives with bipartisan support but died in the Senate.
So when the Legislature fails to pass necessary legislation, it's up to the Executive to make such laws? Obama approves of this message. As long as you have a pen and a phone, you can make any laws you like. I don't want to hear another fucking word about DeSantis supporting unconstitutional rules.
He didn't make it law, he's using his pardon power, which is constitutional.
The Democrats in Kentucky want legalization to come with a vast expansion of government power.
The Republicans want legalization to be essentially stand alone (or coupled with their policies --limiting executive power, school choice, election integrity)
Needless to say, they can't agree.
Since when did Republicans support legalization of marijuana under any circumstance? Serious question.
For example when they legalized it in my state the Republican governor refused to allow regulation to be written, essentially keeping it illegal until he left office.
I see similar stuff around the nation.
Seems to me that the Republican Party has a Drug War boner to go with their steadfast opposition to police reform.
For a while now. Like OTC birth control.
Missouri votes almost 70% Republican and just legalized recreational marijuana in November. Then set a record for quickly implementing that voter initiative statewide. 33 days after the law was officially changed, recreational pot is now available in the previous medical-only dispensaries.
Also, have you ever heard of Nancy Mace? Her bill proposal to federally decriminalize cannabis was by FAR the most libertarian-minded of all of the proposals recently, and the Democrats shot it down because it didn't tax and regulate hard enough.
"...and the Democrats shot it down because it didn’t tax and regulate hard enough."
Sounds about right. If one does not read past the headlines, they would be tempted to conclude such things as "Since when did Republicans support legalization of marijuana under any circumstance?"
Read the 1976 platforms. As soon as La Suprema Corte legalized female individualism per the LP platform in 1973, the Prohibition Party and God's Own Prohibitionists rose in unison to demand the armed bullying of females and legal lynching of potheads et alii.
It's 2023, Hank.
The Republicans want legalization to be essentially stand alone (or coupled with their policies –limiting executive power, school choice, election integrity)
Republicans have, and have had, veto power with their supermajority status. They’ve used that power fairly regularly since COVID days when our shit Governor had shit covid policies, but refuse to muster that same power for whatever bill they’d want to pass.
Republicans don’t want to pass it under any conditions right now. If they did, they could have.
On legalization, they don’t HAVE a supermajority.
This IS Kentucky after all. There are still dry counties.
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Great now do all the other drugs you have absolutely no right to prohibit me from taking.
Let's not confuse power and rights. Rights are moral claims to freedom of action. Power is the time derivative of capacity to kill.
"You can have my psychadelic mushrooms when you pry them from my scaly green hands."
Wasn't Kentucky one of the states subsidized for convict-labor narcotic farms by the Porter Bill Calvin Coolidge signed into law 19JAN1929? The idea was not to grow anything but rather to pen up snowbirds until Bert Hoover could get enough prisons built to REALLY pen them up. The dope dungeons initiative came on the heels of Arnold Rothstein dope empire revelations, and was revived after a quickly-hushed interstate police blitzkreig on 15OCT1929, when the market crashed in free-fall.