| INTRODUCED
FEBRUARY 20, 2003 BY Senator Vasconcellos
PASSED SENATE
SEPTEMBER 11, 2003
PASSED ASSEMBLY
SEPTEMBER 10, 2003
(Principal
coauthor: Assembly Member Leno. Coauthors:
Assembly Members Goldberg, Hancock, and Koretz)
An act to add
Article 2.5 (commencing with Section 11362.7)
to Chapter 6 of Division 10 of the Health and
Safety Code, relating to controlled
substances.
LEGISLATIVE
COUNSEL'S DIGEST
SB 420,
Vasconcellos. Medical marijuana.
Existing law, the
Compassionate Use Act of 1996, prohibits any
physician from being punished, or denied any
right or privilege, for having recommended
marijuana to a patient for medical purposes.
The act prohibits the provisions of law making
unlawful the possession or cultivation of
marijuana from applying to a patient, or to a
patient' s primary caregiver, who possesses or
cultivates marijuana for the personal medical
purposes of the patient upon the written or
oral recommendation or approval of a
physician.
This bill would
require the State Department of Health
Services to establish and maintain a voluntary
program for the issuance of identification
cards to qualified patients and would
establish procedures under which a qualified
patient with an identification card may use
marijuana for medical purposes. The bill would
specify the department's duties in this
regard, including developing related protocols
and forms, and establishing application and
renewal fees for the program.
The bill would
impose various duties upon county health
departments relating to the issuance of
identification cards, thus creating a
state-mandated local program.
The bill would
create various crimes related to the
identification card program, thus imposing a
state-mandated local program. This bill would
authorize the Attorney General to set forth
and clarify details concerning possession and
cultivation limits, and other regulations, as
specified. The bill would also authorize the
Attorney General to recommend modifications to
the possession or cultivation limits set forth
in the bill. The bill would require the
Attorney General to develop and adopt
guidelines to ensure the security and no
diversion of marijuana grown for medical use,
as specified.
The California
Constitution requires the state to reimburse
local agencies and school districts for
certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory
provisions establish procedures for making
that reimbursement, including the creation of
a State Mandates Claims Fund to pay the costs
of mandates that do not exceed $1,000,000
statewide and other procedures for claims
whose statewide costs exceed $1,000,000.
This bill would
provide that no reimbursement is required by
this act for specified reasons.
THE PEOPLE OF THE
STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:
SECTION 1. (a)
The Legislature finds and declares all of the
following:
(1) On November 6,
1996, the people of the State of California
enacted the Compassionate Use Act of 1996
(hereafter the act), codified in Section
11362.5 of the Health and Safety Code, in
order to allow seriously ill residents of
the state, who have the oral or written
approval or recommendation of a physician,
to use marijuana for medical purposes
without fear of criminal liability under
Sections 11357
and 11358
of the Health and Safety Code.
(2) However,
reports from across the state have revealed
problems and uncertainties in the act that
have impeded the ability of law enforcement
officers to enforce its provisions as the
voters intended and, therefore, have
prevented qualified patients and designated
primary caregivers from obtaining the
protections afforded by the act.
(3)
Furthermore, the enactment of this law, as
well as other recent legislation dealing
with pain control, demonstrates that more
information is needed to assess the number
of individuals across the state who are
suffering from serious medical conditions
that are not being adequately alleviated
through the use of conventional medications.
(4) In
addition, the act called upon the state and
the federal government to develop a plan for
the safe and affordable distribution of
marijuana to all patients in medical need
thereof.
(b) It is the
intent of the Legislature, therefore, to do
all of the following:
(1) Clarify the
scope of the application of the act and
facilitate the prompt identification of
qualified patients and their designated
primary caregivers in order to avoid
unnecessary arrest and prosecution of these
individuals and provide needed guidance to
law enforcement officers.
(2) Promote
uniform and consistent application of the
act among the counties within the state.
(3) Enhance the
access of patients and caregivers to medical
marijuana through collective, cooperative
cultivation projects.
(c) It is also
the intent of the Legislature to address
additional issues that were not included
within the act, and that must be resolved in
order to promote the fair and orderly
implementation of the act.
(d) The
Legislature further finds and declares both of
the following:
(1) A state
identification card program will further the
goals outlined in this section.
(2) With
respect to individuals, the identification
system established pursuant to this act must
be wholly voluntary, and a patient entitled
to the protections of Section 11362.5 of the
Health and Safety Code need not possess an
identification card in order to claim the
protections afforded by that section.
(e) The
Legislature further finds and declares that it
enacts this act pursuant to the powers
reserved to the State of California and its
people under the Tenth Amendment to the United
States Constitution.
SEC. 2. Article
2.5 (commencing with Section 11362.7) is added
to Chapter 6 of Division 10 of the Health and
Safety Code, to read:
Article 2.5.
Medical Marijuana Program
Top
of Page
11362.7. For
purposes of this article, the following
definitions shall apply:
(a)
"Attending physician" means an
individual who possesses a license in good
standing to practice medicine or osteopathy
issued by the Medical Board of California or
the Osteopathic Medical Board of California
and who has taken responsibility for an aspect
of the medical care, treatment, diagnosis,
counseling, or referral of a patient and who
has conducted a medical examination of that
patient before recording in the patient's
medical record the physician's assessment of
whether the patient has a serious medical
condition and whether the medical use of
marijuana is appropriate.
(b)
"Department" means the State
Department of Health Services.
(c) "Person
with an identification card" means an
individual who is a qualified patient who has
applied for and received a valid
identification card pursuant to this article.
(d) "Primary
caregiver" means the individual,
designated by a qualified patient or by a
person with an identification card, who has
consistently assumed responsibility for the
housing, health, or safety of that patient or
person, and may include any of the following:
(1) In any case in
which a qualified patient or person with an
identification card receives medical care or
supportive services, or both, from a clinic
licensed pursuant to Chapter 1 (commencing
with Section 1200) of Division 2, a health
care facility licensed pursuant to Chapter 2
(commencing with Section 1250) of Division
2, a residential care facility for persons
with chronic life-threatening illness
licensed pursuant to Chapter 3.01
(commencing with Section 1568.01) of
Division 2, a residential care facility for
the elderly licensed pursuant to Chapter 3.2
(commencing with Section 1569) of Division
2, a hospice, or a home health agency
licensed pursuant to Chapter 8 (commencing
with Section 1725) of Division 2, the owner
or operator, or no more than three employees
who are designated by the owner or operator,
of the clinic, facility, hospice, or home
health agency, if designated as a primary
caregiver by that qualified patient or
person with an identification card.
(2) An
individual who has been designated as a
primary caregiver by more than one qualified
patient or person with an identification
card, if every qualified patient or person
with an identification card who has
designated that individual as a primary
caregiver resides in the same city or county
as the primary caregiver.
(3) An
individual who has been designated as a
primary caregiver by a qualified patient or
person with an identification card who
resides in a city or county other than that
of the primary caregiver, if the individual
has not been designated as a primary
caregiver by any other qualified patient or
person with an identification card.
(e) A primary
caregiver shall be at least 18 years of age,
unless the primary caregiver is the parent of
a minor child who is a qualified patient or a
person with an identification card or the
primary caregiver is a person otherwise
entitled to make medical decisions under state
law pursuant to Sections 6922, 7002, 7050, or
7120 of the Family Code.
(f)
"Qualified patient" means a person
who is entitled to the protections of Section
11362.5, but who does not have an
identification card issued pursuant to this
article.
(g)
"Identification card" means a
document issued by the State Department of
Health Services that document identifies a
person authorized to engage in the medical use
of marijuana and the person's designated
primary caregiver, if any.
(h) "Serious
medical condition" means all of the
following medical conditions:
(1) Acquired
immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS).
(2) Anorexia.
(3) Arthritis.
(4) Cachexia.
(5) Cancer.
(6) Chronic
pain.
(7) Glaucoma.
(8) Migraine.
(9) Persistent
muscle spasms, including, but not limited
to, spasms associated with multiple
sclerosis.
(10) Seizures,
including, but not limited to, seizures
associated with epilepsy.
(11) Severe
nausea.
(12) Any other
chronic or persistent medical symptom that
either:
(A)
Substantially limits the ability of the
person to conduct one or more major life
activities as defined in the Americans
with Disabilities Act of 1990 (Public Law
101-336).
(B) If not
alleviated, may cause serious harm to the
patient's safety or physical or mental
health.
(i) "Written
documentation" means accurate
reproductions of those portions of a patient's
medical records that have been created by the
attending physician, that contain the
information required by paragraph (2) of
subdivision (a) of Section 11362.715, and that
the patient may submit to a county health
department or the county's designee as part of
an application for an identification card.
11362.71. (a) (1)
The department shall establish and maintain a
voluntary program for the issuance of
identification cards to qualified patients who
satisfy the requirements of this article and
voluntarily apply to the identification card
program.
(2) The department
shall establish and maintain a 24-hour,
toll-free telephone number that will enable
state and local law enforcement officers to
have immediate access to information
necessary to verify the validity of an
identification card issued by the
department, until a cost-effective Internet
Web-based system can be developed for this
purpose.
(b) Every county
health department, or the county's designee,
shall do all of the following:
(1) Provide
applications upon request to individuals
seeking to join the identification card
program.
(2) Receive and
process completed applications in accordance
with Section 11362.72.
(3) Maintain
records of identification card programs.
(4) Utilize
protocols developed by the department
pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision
(d).
(5) Issue
identification cards developed by the
department to approved applicants and
designated primary caregivers.
(c) The county
board of supervisors may designate another
health-related governmental or nongovernmental
entity or organization to perform the
functions described in subdivision (b), except
for an entity or organization that cultivates
or distributes marijuana.
(d) The
department shall develop all of the following:
(1) Protocols that
shall be used by a county health department
or the county's designee to implement the
responsibilities described in subdivision
(b), including, but not limited to,
protocols to confirm the accuracy of
information contained in an application and
to protect the confidentiality of program
records.
(2) Application
forms that shall be issued to requesting
applicants.
(3) An
identification card that identifies a person
authorized to engage in the medical use of
marijuana and an identification card that
identifies the person's designated primary
caregiver, if any. The two identification
cards developed pursuant to this paragraph
shall be easily distinguishable from each
other.
(e) No person or
designated primary caregiver in possession of
a valid identification card shall be subject
to arrest for possession, transportation,
delivery, or cultivation of medical marijuana
in an amount established pursuant to this
article, unless there is reasonable cause to
believe that the information contained in the
card is false or falsified, the card has been
obtained by means of fraud, or the person is
otherwise in violation of the provisions of
this article.
(f) It shall not
be necessary for a person to obtain an
identification card in order to claim the
protections of Section 11362.5.
11362.715. (a) A
person who seeks an identification card shall
pay the fee, as provided in Section 11362.755,
and provide all of the following to the county
health department or the county's designee on
a form developed and provided by the
department:
(1) The name of
the person, and proof of his or her
residency within the county.
(2) Written
documentation by the attending physician in
the person' s medical records stating that
the person has been diagnosed with a serious
medical condition and that the medical use
of marijuana is appropriate.
(3) The name,
office address, office telephone number, and
California medical license number of the
person's attending physician.
(4) The name
and the duties of the primary caregiver.
(5) A
government-issued photo identification card
of the person and of the designated primary
caregiver, if any. If the applicant is a
person under 18 years of age, a certified
copy of a birth certificate shall be deemed
sufficient proof of identity.
(b) If the person
applying for an identification card lacks the
capacity to make medical decisions, the
application may be made by the person's legal
representative, including, but not limited to,
any of the following:
(1) A conservator
with authority to make medical decisions.
(2) An
attorney-in-fact under a durable power of
attorney for health care or surrogate
decision maker authorized under another
advanced health care directive.
(3) Any other
individual authorized by statutory or
decisional law to make medical decisions for
the person.
(c) The legal
representative described in subdivision (b)
may also designate in the application an
individual, including himself or herself, to
serve as a primary caregiver for the person,
provided that the individual meets the
definition of a primary caregiver.
(d) The person or
legal representative submitting the written
information and documentation described in
subdivision (a) shall retain a copy thereof.
11362.72. (a)
Within 30 days of receipt of an application
for an identification card, a county health
department or the county's designee shall do
all of the following:
(1) For purposes
of processing the application, verify that
the information contained in the application
is accurate. If the person is less than 18
years of age, the county health department
or its designee shall also contact the
parent with legal authority to make medical
decisions, legal guardian, or other person
or entity with legal authority to make
medical decisions, to verify the
information.
(2) Verify with
the Medical Board of California or the
Osteopathic Medical Board of California that
the attending physician has a license in
good standing to practice medicine or
osteopathy in the state.
(3) Contact the
attending physician by facsimile, telephone,
or mail to confirm that the medical records
submitted by the patient are a true and
correct copy of those contained in the
physician's office records. When contacted
by a county health department or the county'
s designee, the attending physician shall
confirm or deny that the contents of the
medical records are accurate.
(4) Take a
photograph or otherwise obtain an
electronically transmissible image of the
applicant and of the designated primary
caregiver, if any.
(5) Approve or
deny the application. If an applicant who
meets the requirements of Section 11362.715
can establish that an identification card is
needed on an emergency basis, the county or
its designee shall issue a temporary
identification card that shall be valid for
30 days from the date of issuance. The
county, or its designee, may extend the
temporary identification card for no more
than 30 days at a time, so long as the
applicant continues to meet the requirements
of this paragraph.
(b) If the county
health department or the county's designee
approves the application, it shall, within 24
hours, or by the end of the next working day
of approving the application, electronically
transmit the following information to the
department:
(1) A unique user
identification number of the applicant.
(2) The date of
expiration of the identification card.
(3) The name
and telephone number of the county health
department or the county's designee that has
approved the application.
(c) The county
health department or the county's designee
shall issue an identification card to the
applicant and to his or her designated primary
caregiver, if any, within five working days of
approving the application.
(d) In any case
involving an incomplete application, the
applicant shall assume responsibility for
rectifying the deficiency. The county shall
have 14 days from the receipt of information
from the applicant pursuant to this
subdivision to approve or deny the
application.
11362.735. (a) An
identification card issued by the county
health department shall be serially numbered
and shall contain all of the following:
(1) A unique user
identification number of the cardholder.
(2) The date of
expiration of the identification card.
(3) The name
and telephone number of the county health
department or the county's designee that has
approved the application.
(4) A 24-hour,
toll-free telephone number, to be maintained
by the department, that will enable state
and local law enforcement officers to have
immediate access to information necessary to
verify the validity of the card.
(5) Photo
identification of the cardholder.
(b) A separate
identification card shall be issued to the
person's designated primary caregiver, if any,
and shall include a photo identification of
the caregiver.
11362.74. (a) The
county health department or the county's
designee may deny an application only for any
of the following reasons:
(1) The applicant
did not provide the information required by
Section 11362.715, and upon notice of the
deficiency pursuant to subdivision (d) of
Section 11362.72, did not provide the
information within 30 days.
(2) The county
health department or the county's designee
determines that the information provided was
false.
(3) The
applicant does not meet the criteria set
forth in this article.
(b) Any person
whose application has been denied pursuant to
subdivision (a) may not reapply for six months
from the date of denial unless otherwise
authorized by the county health department or
the county's designee or by a court of
competent jurisdiction.
(c) Any person
whose application has been denied pursuant to
subdivision (a) may appeal that decision to
the department. The county health department
or the county's designee shall make available
a telephone number or address to which the
denied applicant can direct an appeal.
11362.745. (a) An
identification card shall be valid for a
period of one year.
(b) Upon annual
renewal of an identification card, the county
health department or its designee shall verify
all new information and may verify any other
information that has not changed. (c) The
county health department or the county's
designee shall transmit its determination of
approval or denial of a renewal to the
department.
11362.755. (a)
The department shall establish application and
renewal fees for persons seeking to obtain or
renew identification cards that are sufficient
to cover the expenses incurred by the
department, including the startup cost, the
cost of reduced fees for Medi-Cal
beneficiaries in accordance with subdivision
(b), the cost of identifying and developing a
cost-effective Internet Web-based system, and
the cost of maintaining the 24-hour toll-free
telephone number. Each county health
department or the county's designee may charge
an additional fee for all costs incurred by
the county or the county's designee for
administering the program pursuant to this
article.
(b) Upon
satisfactory proof of participation and
eligibility in the Medi-Cal program, a Medi-Cal
beneficiary shall receive a 50 percent
reduction in the fees established pursuant to
this section.
11362.76. (a) A
person who possesses an identification card
shall:
(1) Within seven
days, notify the county health department or
the county's designee of any change in the
person's attending physician or designated
primary caregiver, if any.
(2) Annually
submit to the county health department or
the county' s designee the following:
(A) Updated
written documentation of the person's
serious medical condition.
(B) The name
and duties of the person's designated
primary caregiver, if any, for the
forthcoming year.
(b) If a person
who possesses an identification card fails to
comply with this section, the card shall be
deemed expired. If an identification card
expires, the identification card of any
designated primary caregiver of the person
shall also expire.
(c) If the
designated primary caregiver has been changed,
the previous primary caregiver shall return
his or her identification card to the
department or to the county health department
or the county's designee.
(d) If the owner
or operator or an employee of the owner or
operator of a provider has been designated as
a primary caregiver pursuant to paragraph (1)
of subdivision (d) of Section 11362.7,
of the qualified patient or person with an
identification card, the owner or operator
shall notify the county health department or
the county's designee, pursuant to Section 11362.715,
if a change in the designated primary
caregiver has occurred.
11362.765. (a)
Subject to the requirements of this article,
the individuals specified in subdivision (b)
shall not be subject, on that sole basis, to
criminal liability under Section 11357,
11358,
11359,
11360,
11366, 11366.5,
or 11570. However,
nothing in this section shall authorize the
individual to smoke or otherwise consume
marijuana unless otherwise authorized by this
article, nor shall anything in this section
authorize any individual or group to cultivate
or distribute marijuana for profit.
(b) Subdivision
(a) shall apply to all of the following:
(1) A qualified
patient or a person with an identification
card who transports or processes marijuana
for his or her own personal medical use.
(2) A
designated primary caregiver who transports,
processes, administers, delivers, or gives
away marijuana for medical purposes, in
amounts not exceeding those established in
subdivision (a) of Section 11362.77,
only to the qualified patient of the primary
caregiver, or to the person with an
identification card who has designated the
individual as a primary caregiver.
(3) Any
individual who provides assistance to a
qualified patient or a person with an
identification card, or his or her
designated primary caregiver, in
administering medical marijuana to the
qualified patient or person or acquiring the
skills necessary to cultivate or administer
marijuana for medical purposes to the
qualified patient or person.
(c) A primary
caregiver who receives compensation for actual
expenses, including reasonable compensation
incurred for services provided to an eligible
qualified patient or person with an
identification card to enable that person to
use marijuana under this article, or for
payment for out-of-pocket expenses incurred in
providing those services, or both, shall not,
on the sole basis of that fact, be subject to
prosecution or punishment under Section 11359
or 11360.
11362.77. (a) A
qualified patient or primary caregiver may
possess no more than eight ounces of dried
marijuana per qualified patient. In addition,
a qualified patient or primary caregiver may
also maintain no more than six mature or 12
immature marijuana plants per qualified
patient.
(b) If a
qualified patient or primary caregiver has a
doctor's recommendation that this quantity
does not meet the qualified patient' s medical
needs, the qualified patient or primary
caregiver may possess an amount of marijuana
consistent with the patient's needs.
(c) Counties and
cities may retain or enact medical marijuana
guidelines allowing qualified patients or
primary caregivers to exceed the state limits
set forth in subdivision (a).
(d) Only the
dried mature processed flowers of female
cannabis plant or the plant conversion shall
be considered when determining allowable
quantities of marijuana under this section.
(e) The Attorney
General may recommend modifications to the
possession or cultivation limits set forth in
this section. These recommendations, if any,
shall be made to the Legislature no later than
December 1, 2005, and may be made only after
public comment and consultation with
interested organizations, including, but not
limited to, patients, health care
professionals, researchers, law enforcement,
and local governments. Any recommended
modification shall be consistent with the
intent of this article and shall be based on
currently available scientific research.
(f) A qualified
patient or a person holding a valid
identification card, or the designated primary
caregiver of that qualified patient or person,
may possess amounts of marijuana consistent
with this article.
11362.775.
Qualified patients, persons with valid
identification cards, and the designated
primary caregivers of qualified patients and
persons with identification cards, who
associate within the State of California in
order collectively or cooperatively to
cultivate marijuana for medical purposes,
shall not solely on the basis of that fact be
subject to state criminal sanctions under
Section 11357,
11358,
11359,
11360,
11366, 11366.5,
or 11570.
11362.78. A state
or local law enforcement agency or officer
shall not refuse to accept an identification
card issued by the department unless the state
or local law enforcement agency or officer has
reasonable cause to believe that the
information contained in the card is false or
fraudulent, or the card is being used
fraudulently.
11362.785. (a)
Nothing in this article shall require any
accommodation of any medical use of marijuana
on the property or premises of any place of
employment or during the hours of employment
or on the property or premises of any jail,
correctional facility, or other type of penal
institution in which prisoners reside or
persons under arrest are detained.
(b)
Notwithstanding subdivision (a), a person
shall not be prohibited or prevented from
obtaining and submitting the written
information and documentation necessary to
apply for an identification card on the basis
that the person is incarcerated in a jail,
correctional facility, or other penal
institution in which prisoners reside or
persons under arrest are detained.
(c) Nothing in
this article shall prohibit a jail,
correctional facility, or other penal
institution in which prisoners reside or
persons under arrest are detained, from
permitting a prisoner or a person under arrest
who has an identification card, to use
marijuana for medical purposes under
circumstances that will not endanger the
health or safety of other prisoners or the
security of the facility.
(d) Nothing in
this article shall require a governmental,
private, or any other health insurance
provider or health care service plan to be
liable for any claim for reimbursement for the
medical use of marijuana.
11362.79. Nothing
in this article shall authorize a qualified
patient or person with an identification card
to engage in the smoking of medical marijuana
under any of the following circumstances:
(a) In any place
where smoking is prohibited by law.
(b) In or within
1,000 feet of the grounds of a school,
recreation center, or youth center, unless the
medical use occurs within a residence.
(c) On a school
bus.
(d) While in a
motor vehicle that is being operated.
(e) While
operating a boat.
11362.795. (a)
(1) Any criminal defendant who is eligible to
use marijuana pursuant to Section 11362.5 may
request that the court confirm that he or she
is allowed to use medical marijuana while he
or she is on probation or released on bail.
(2) The court's
decision and the reasons for the decision
shall be stated on the record and an entry
stating those reasons shall be made in the
minutes of the court.
(3) During the
period of probation or release on bail, if a
physician recommends that the probationer or
defendant use medical marijuana, the
probationer or defendant may request a
modification of the conditions of probation
or bail to authorize the use of medical
marijuana.
(4) The court's
consideration of the modification request
authorized by this subdivision shall comply
with the requirements of this section.
(b) (1) Any
person who is to be released on parole from a
jail, state prison, school, road camp, or
other state or local institution of
confinement and who is eligible to use medical
marijuana pursuant to Section 11362.5 may
request that he or she be allowed to use
medical marijuana during the period he or she
is released on parole. A parolee's written
conditions of parole shall reflect whether or
not a request for a modification of the
conditions of his or her parole to use medical
marijuana was made, and whether the request
was granted or denied.
(2) During the
period of the parole, where a physician
recommends that the parolee use medical
marijuana, the parolee may request a
modification of the conditions of the parole
to authorize the use of medical marijuana.
(3) Any parolee
whose request to use medical marijuana while
on parole was denied may pursue an
administrative appeal of the decision. Any
decision on the appeal shall be in writing
and shall reflect the reasons for the
decision.
(4) The
administrative consideration of the
modification request authorized by this
subdivision shall comply with the
requirements of this section.
11362.8. No
professional licensing board may impose a
civil penalty or take other disciplinary
action against a licensee based solely on the
fact that the licensee has performed acts that
are necessary or appropriate to carry out the
licensee's role as a designated primary
caregiver to a person who is a qualified
patient or who possesses a lawful
identification card issued pursuant to Section
11362.72. However, this section shall not
apply to acts performed by a physician
relating to the discussion or recommendation
of the medical use of marijuana to a patient.
These discussions or recommendations, or both,
shall be governed by Section 11362.5.
11362.81. (a) A
person specified in subdivision (b) shall be
subject to the following penalties:
(1) For the first
offense, imprisonment in the county jail for
no more than six months or a fine not to
exceed one thousand dollars ($1,000), or
both.
(2) For a
second or subsequent offense, imprisonment
in the county jail for no more than one
year, or a fine not to exceed one thousand
dollars ($1,000), or both.
(b) Subdivision
(a) applies to any of the following:
(1) A person who
fraudulently represents a medical condition
or fraudulently provides any material
misinformation to a physician, county health
department or the county's designee, or
state or local law enforcement agency or
officer, for the purpose of falsely
obtaining an identification card.
(2) A person
who steals or fraudulently uses any person's
identification card in order to acquire,
possess, cultivate, transport, use, produce,
or distribute marijuana.
(3) A person
who counterfeits, tampers with, or
fraudulently produces an identification
card.
(4) A person
who breaches the confidentiality
requirements of this article to information
provided to, or contained in the records of,
the department or of a county health
department or the county's designee
pertaining to an identification card
program.
(c) In addition
to the penalties prescribed in subdivision
(a), any person described in subdivision (b)
may be precluded from attempting to obtain, or
obtaining or using, an identification card for
a period of up to six months at the discretion
of the court.
(d) In addition
to the requirements of this article, the
Attorney General shall develop and adopt
appropriate guidelines to ensure the security
and non-diversion of marijuana grown for
medical use by patients qualified under the
Compassionate Use Act of 1996.
11362.82. If any
section, subdivision, sentence, clause,
phrase, or portion of this article is for any
reason held invalid or unconstitutional by any
court of competent jurisdiction, that portion
shall be deemed a separate, distinct, and
independent provision, and that holding shall
not affect the validity of the remaining
portion thereof.
11362.83. Nothing
in this article shall prevent a city or other
local governing body from adopting and
enforcing laws consistent with this article.
SEC. 3. No
reimbursement is required by this act pursuant
to Section 6 of Article XIII B of the
California Constitution for certain costs that
may be incurred by a local agency or school
district because in that regard this act
creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates
a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty
for a crime or infraction, within the meaning
of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or
changes the definition of a crime within the
meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the
California Constitution.
In addition, no
reimbursement is required by this act pursuant
to Section 6 of Article XIII B of the
California Constitution for other costs
mandated by the state because this act
includes additional revenue that is
specifically intended to fund the costs of the
state mandate in an amount sufficient to fund
the cost of the state mandate, within the
meaning of Section 17556 of the Government
Code.
*
Footnotes to the above:
11366.
Every person who opens or maintains any place
for the purpose of unlawfully selling, giving
away, or using any controlled substance which
is (1) specified in subdivision (b), (c), or
(e), or paragraph (1) of subdivision (f) of
Section 11054, specified in paragraph (13),
(14), (15), or (20) of subdivision (d) of
Section 11054, or specified in subdivision
(b), (c), paragraph (1) or (2) of subdivision
(d), or paragraph (3) of subdivision (e) of
Section 11055, or (2) which is a narcotic drug
classified in Schedule III, IV, or V, shall be
punished by imprisonment in the county jail
for a period of not more than one year or the
state prison.
11366.5.
(a) Any person who has under his or her
management or control any building, room,
space, or enclosure, either as an owner,
lessee, agent, employee, or mortgagee, who
knowingly rents, leases, or makes available
for use, with or without compensation, the
building, room, space, or enclosure for the
purpose of unlawfully manufacturing, storing,
or distributing any controlled substance for
sale or distribution shall be punished by
imprisonment in the county jail for not more
than one year, or in the state prison.
(b) Any person
who has under his or her management or control
any building, room, space, or enclosure,
either as an owner, lessee, agent, employee,
or mortgagee, who knowingly allows the
building, room, space, or enclosure to be
fortified to suppress law enforcement entry in
order to further the sale of any amount of
cocaine base as specified in paragraph (1) of
subdivision (f) of Section 11054, cocaine as
specified in paragraph (6) of subdivision (b)
of Section 11055, heroin, phencyclidine,
amphetamine, methamphetamine, or lysergic acid
diethylamide and who obtains excessive profits
from the use of the building, room, space, or
enclosure shall be punished by imprisonment in
the state prison for two, three, or four
years.
(c) Any person
who violates subdivision (a) after previously
being convicted of a violation of subdivision
(a) shall be punished by imprisonment in the
state prison for two, three, or four years.
(d) For the
purposes of this section, "excessive
profits" means the receipt of
consideration of a value substantially higher
than fair market value.
11570.
Every building or place used for the purpose
of unlawfully selling, serving, storing,
keeping, manufacturing, or giving away any
controlled substance, precursor, or analog
specified in this division, and every building
or place wherein or upon which those acts take
place, is a nuisance which shall be enjoined,
abated, and prevented, and for which damages
may be recovered, whether it is a public or
private nuisance.
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