Editor’s note: An earlier version of this story originally appeared on Planet Jackson Hole.
JACKSON HOLE, WY – A New
Mexico woman driving through Jackson, Wyoming, on her way to Montana to
care for her ailing mother left the state recently with a life-changing
souvenir.
In early July, Anita Maddux, 50, was
charged with a felony for possessing a 10-milliliter sample bottle of
cannabidiol (CBD) oil from Cid’s, a Taos, New Mexico, health food store.
Now Maddux could face up to five years in prison and a $10,000 fine
pending an August 16 hearing.
Jailed as a 'flight risk' for CBD: A 50-year-old woman driving home to nurse her mother fighting stage 4 cancer.
At Cid’s, Maddux worked as an herbalist in the health and wellness department where she received a sample shipment of CBD oil from Functional Remedies. The Colorado company’s CBD oil can be found on the shelves of many health food stores and groceries, including Lucky’s Market in Jackson at the time of her arrest. Weeks ago, Maddux placed the sample bottle in her bag and didn’t give it another thought.
On Sunday, July 8, as Maddux drove north
toward Montana, Teton County Sheriff’s Deputy Jesse Willcox noticed
Maddux’s expired California license plate. He pulled Maddux over and
discovered she was driving with an expired license and without
insurance. Maddux said she has led a simple life and didn’t have the
money to address those issues before hitting the road. “My plan was to
just get to Montana, to be with my family and take care of everything
there,” she said.
Can You Pay?
According to the probable cause affidavit, Willcox asked Maddux if she could pay an $850 fine for the tickets or appear in court on July 31. The affidavit stated Maddux said she could do neither.
She didn’t think that would land her in jail, Maddux said. “I
have never been pulled over before. So I thought the best thing to do
was just to be honest about my situation.” A July 30 background check on
Maddux showed she has no criminal history.
After he deemed her “a flight risk”
because she could not pay the fines and was likely to not appear in
court, Willcox arrested Maddux.
Sold the Car to Pay the Lawyer
At Teton County jail, personnel found her
CBD oil and used a NIK test to determine the presence of THC. NIK tests
are “rudimentary,” as Smith put it, however. They only confirm the mere
presence of THC, not the actual amount. The oil, then, was sent to
Wyoming’s crime lab for “analysis” and Maddux sat in jail for roughly 36
hours. She was released on a $1,000-dollar bond.
Life has already changed for Maddux. To
help pay for an attorney, she sold her Toyota Tercel for $550 and is now
relying on the generosity of friends to make ends meet. Maddux worries
the volunteer and service work that has become a large part of her
identity will no longer be an option if she is convicted of a felony.
She worked as a disaster relief volunteer in Haiti after its 2010
earthquake and in the Philippines after its 2013 typhoon.
Two Weeks Later: Grocery Crackdown
Two weeks after Maddux’s arrest, local
and state law enforcement showed up to two local Jackson Hole stores,
Lucky’s Market and Jackson Whole Grocer, to inform those store officials
that CBD products were illegal to sell if they contained any amount of
THC, the psychoactive component of cannabis. Both stores have since
removed those products from their shelves.
Most CBD oil sold in stores like Lucky’s
and JWG purport to contain .3 percent (or less) THC, an amount that does
not have mind-altering effects as outlined in the 2014 federal Farm
Bill. Third party lab analysis obtained by Planet Jackson Hole shows that Maddux’s CBD oil was under that threshold at .06 total THC.
Don’t Try It In Wyoming
Indeed, as other states loosen cannabis
laws and federal lawmakers sponsor legislation to do the same, Wyoming
remains a dubious place to possess a hemp-derived product with even
trace amounts of THC. It is a felony offense in Wyoming to sell, buy or
possess more than .03 grams of CBD oil that contains any amount of THC.
The FDA just approved CBD in Epidiolex, but the DEA still says it's an illegal Schedule I substance.
However, manufacturers maintain that if their product contains traces of up to .3 percent it is perfectly legal, sowing confusion for state residents and retailers.
Lucky’s did not return several requests
for comment, nor did the attorney representing Functional Remedies,
Garrett Graff of Hoban Law Group.
What Is CBD?
CBD is a non-intoxicating compound
found in cannabis plants with a slew of reported health benefits. The
Food and Drug Administration just approved it to treat epilepsy in the
form of the new drug Epidiolex. (Wyoming does allow people with
intractable epilepsy to use CBD oil under the care of a licensed
neurologist.)
Cannabidiol may also treat everything
from Alzheimer’s disease and Parkinson’s to depression, anxiety,
inflammation and pain, according to the World Health Organization. The WHO’s Expert Committee on Drug Dependence recently determined that CBD “exhibits no effects indicative of any abuse or dependence potential.”
Classification and Confusion
Despite the WHO’s recent findings, in the
United States, CBD is a Schedule 1 drug under the Controlled Substances
Act, meaning the federal government does not recognize its medicinal
uses and considers it to have a high likelihood for abuse.
That classification hasn’t stopped its proliferation.
CBD oil has fueled a multimillion dollar
industry online and at health food stores across the country.
In
September 2017, the retail giant Target was the first mega-chain to dip
its toes into the cannabidiol waters. It wasn’t a pioneer for long,
though. It pulled the products from its online shelves after just a few
weeks. One month later, Lucky’s made the leap, becoming the first chain
natural grocer to carry CBD products.
DEA: ‘Illegal but not High Priority’
So why are mom and pop health stores and some chain retailers carrying the products if they are illegal?
'With our limited resources, marijuana
has not been our highest priority. It is not a priority like opioids or
synthetics which are killing people.'
Barbara Carreno, DEA spokesperson
For one thing, the federal Drug Enforcement Administration hasn’t been shy about its indifference.
“While CBD currently is still Schedule 1,
with our limited resources marijuana has not been our highest
priority,” Barbara Carreno, a spokesperson for the DEA, told Planet Jackson Hole. “It is not a priority like opioids or synthetics which are killing people.”
What’s more, Carreno said everything
could change when the DEA schedules Epidiolex for medical use on
September 24. A plant or botanical could have both uses that are legal
and safe and uses that are not, Carreno said. As an example, she pointed
to the opium poppy: “you get heroin and oxycodone from that.”
Marijuana, meanwhile, “is a plant with
many extracts, THC is one and CBD is another,” she said. “CBD has a
small amount of THC but it is very, very low.”
Allowed Under 2014 Farm Bill
But the overarching reason manufacturers are producing and selling these products en masse is because of the 2014 Farm Bill. That
bill legalized the production of hemp under state pilot programs as
long as those hemp products contain less than .3 percent THC.
Wyoming actually has a legal hemp program, slated to begin next year.
Under the Farm Bill, 40 states have
legalized hemp programs including Wyoming. Its program is slated to
begin in 2019. That confuses matters because as Wyoming works to
implement a hemp cultivation program, it is still illegal to sell or
possess hemp products in the state if they contain THC.
The federal program has some legal
experts arguing Maddux wasn’t in the wrong. “As long as hemp was grown
as part of a state pilot program (like Maddux’s Functional Remedies CBD
oil) then it is federally legal,” said Jonathan Miller, general counsel
to the U.S. Hemp Roundtable. That means Maddux “is allowed to take it across state lines,” he said.
Miller called Maddux’s case
“unprecedented.” To his knowledge, it is the first time someone faces
charges for carrying a vial of CBD oil. He pointed to cases where people
have been arrested for possession of both marijuana and CBD. The “CBD
was thrown out,” he said.
Wyoming cannabis law, Miller continued,
is confusing. “It is quite unfortunate law enforcement would take that
confusing law and charge someone for having a product that has virtually
no THC and which the World Health Organization has classified as
harmless,” he said. “I would hope law enforcement was focusing instead
on drugs that kill people.”
Congress Moving to Confirm Legality
On the national stage, Congress is moving
in a direction that would remove hemp (cannabis containing less than .3
percent THC) from its classification as a Schedule I controlled
substance.
Sen. Mitch McConnell–R, Kentucky, is leading that charge with
the 2018 Hemp Farming Act. It handily passed in the Senate 86-11 on
June 28.
In Congress, the Republican-led farm bill would remove hemp's Schedule I status. It's already passed the Senate.
Wyoming, though, is fond of bucking
national trends, especially when it comes to cannabis. The state has a
tight grip on cannabis laws even as public opinion swings drastically in
the other direction.
For example, more than 80 percent of
Wyomingites say they want to see the legalization of medicinal marijuana
and 60 percent oppose jailing people for marijuana offenses, according
to a 2016 survey by the University of Wyoming Survey and Analysis
Center.
Jackson Whole Grocer herbalist Heather
Olson agrees with those sentiments. She also believes in CBD’s long list
of supposed health benefits and was unhappy to remove products from the
shelves.
But Olson said there is a problem with certain companies. She
said officials from Wyoming’s Division of Criminal Investigation told
her some of the products they tested carried higher levels of THC than
what was indicated on the label.
But Wyoming’s crime lab—where DCI tests substances—cannot actually test for specific amounts of THC.
Your Tax Money, Well Spent
Local law enforcement has been in contact
with Wyoming’s Division of Criminal Investigation since fall 2017 when
Lucky’s and Jackson Whole Grocer began carrying CBD oil. Jackson Chief
of Police Todd Smith “reached out to us and asked us for some help
because these products were being sold,” said Ronnie Jones of DCI. “Then
we discovered this was going on across the state.”
'I am duty-bound to uphold those laws. Clearly, if we were to talk philosophy, I might talk differently.'
Jim Whalen, Teton County Sheriff
Since then, Jones said DCI has been
visiting retail stores and conducting investigations to confirm whether
those CBD products contain THC.
Local law enforcement says as long as
state law dictates it, they will enforce CBD’s prohibition.
“I am
duty-bound to uphold those laws,” Teton County Sheriff Jim Whalen said.
“Clearly, if we were to talk philosophy, I might talk differently,” he
added.
Whalen did not seem convinced Maddux’s
felony charge would stick. He suspected it would be pleaded down and
pointed to his department’s lenient proclivities. “In terms of
misdemeanors, we would prefer to write a citation and send people on
their way, which is different than many municipalities.”
Law enforcement is indeed “duty-bound” by
laws set forth by the Wyoming Legislature.
But cannabis advocates, like
Laramie attorney and Wyoming House Minority Whip Charles Pelkey–D,
Laramie, point to the state’s law enforcement as a barrier to softening
cannabis laws.
Wyoming Rep. Stan Blake–D, Green River,
“has introduced bills to make CBD oil readily available but we have
gotten opposition from the Wyoming Association of Sheriffs and Chiefs of
Police that any THC is a violation of the law,” Pelkey said.
Sheriffs Want to Keep It Illegal
It is true that sheriff and police
associations throughout the country have pushed back against cannabis
laws. Some point to Colorado’s rising crime rates since that state
legalized recreational marijuana in 2014, though it is unclear if the
two are related. Police Chief Smith said the notion that sheriffs and
chiefs could hold that type of sway in the Legislature is absurd. “Law
enforcement inherits the law from the Legislature,” he said. “We may get
to testify our professional opinion but for any legislator to blame it
on us is a cop out.”
The state sheriffs association has actively lobbied against all forms of cannabis reform, including medical marijuana.
Its website warns that “many adults are also unaware of how marijuana harms lives, and are confused by misinformation on perceived benefits of medical use of marijuana.”
Medical professionals, on the other hand, often have different feelings about medical marijuana and its potential uses. On Harvard Medical School’s health blog, Dr. Peter Grinspoon acknowledged that medical marijuana is a subject of debate among doctors, researchers, policymakers, police and the public. But, he said CBD falls into its own category.
“Least controversial is … CBD because this component of marijuana has little, if any, intoxicating properties,” Grinspoon wrote. “CBD-dominant strains have little or no THC, so patients report very little if any alteration in consciousness. Patients do, however, report many benefits of CBD, from relieving insomnia, anxiety, spasticity, and pain to treating potentially life-threatening conditions such as epilepsy.”
Life Upheaval Over…What?
Back in Montana (where medical marijuana and CBD products happen to be legal),
Maddux is biding her time caring for her ailing mother and going to job
interviews. She does not dispute the reason why she was initially
pulled over, which had nothing to do with CBD oil. But she reflecting
more deeply about her experience with the law.
Part of her past volunteer work involved
offering yoga instruction to inmates in Oregon prisons.
Maddux’s
experience in Jackson has her wondering about some of those inmates and
their predicaments. In other words, had she lacked the resources and
life experience to question what happened and obtain a lawyer, Maddux
said she could have slipped through the cracks of the legal system.
While local law enforcement seems
confident a felony will not stick on her record, Maddux said in the
meantime she agonizes about her August 16 hearing. Her life, she said,
“has been thrown into upheaval.”
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