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Colorado MMJ License ?'s

fireman22

Member
Pikes Peak 69: When I went in it was based on the knowledge you shared with me previously where you stated the same thing. I asked the notary and she said the feds and state have access and I asked about the job isue and she said they could check but she doesn't know if they do. I would love to see where you got your info from because I am still kind of worried
 

BIOJenn

Member
That's not true. The law (amendment 20) ONLY allows for the registry to verify certain info that a LEO or even a Fed provides them. If you don't mention it or show your card, by law it can't be verified.

pp69
pp69 always balls on..its good to know your shit when it comes to this whole med scene..tons of people dont know at all or know very little or are just misled when it comes to the law and amendment20. :kos: +k to ya bruddah
 

BIOJenn

Member
Pikes Peak 69: When I went in it was based on the knowledge you shared with me previously where you stated the same thing. I asked the notary and she said the feds and state have access and I asked about the job isue and she said they could check but she doesn't know if they do. I would love to see where you got your info from because I am still kind of worried
this makes me feel you didnt read Amendment20 or the state site?
 

pikes peak 69

Active member
let's start with a few links.

http://www.cdphe.state.co.us/hs/medicalmarijuana/2008-01MMRProcedureaccessinginformation.pdf


http://www.cdphe.state.co.us/hs/medicalmarijuana/amendment.html

Copied in part from the second link.

(3) The state health agency shall create and maintain a confidential registry of patients who have applied for and are entitled to receive a registry identification card according to the criteria set forth in this subsection, effective June 1, 2001.



(a) No person shall be permitted to gain access to any information about patients in the state health agency's confidential registry, or any information otherwise maintained by the state health agency about physicians and primary care-givers, except for authorized employees of the state health agency in the course of their official duties and authorized employees of state or local law enforcement agencies which have stopped or arrested a person who claims to be engaged in the medical use of marijuana and in possession of a registry identification card or its functional equivalent, pursuant to paragraph (e) of this subsection (3). Authorized employees of state or local law enforcement agencies shall be granted access to the information contained within the state health agency's confidential registry only for the purpose of verifying that an individual who has presented a registry identification card to a state or local law enforcement official is lawfully in possession of such card.


That should ease your mind.
pp69

Pikes Peak 69: When I went in it was based on the knowledge you shared with me previously where you stated the same thing. I asked the notary and she said the feds and state have access and I asked about the job isue and she said they could check but she doesn't know if they do. I would love to see where you got your info from because I am still kind of worried
 

TheStrainMan

Well-known member
Veteran
ONLY the feds and cops can make the phone call to the registry, and given there are about 11-12 thou patients, it probably happens rarely. For anyone else or anything else other than getting caught with pot and/or a pipe etc, our right to privacy is protected by the state constitution. Unless you are applying to be a secret service guy, your jobsearch will NOT be affected by your medical marijuana certificate in any way.

http://TheStrainMan.Blogspot.com
 

rudeboy52

Member
now that caregivers need to send a copy of a photo id, will you be denied if you put a p.o. box for the address? i dont think you can put a P.O. box as your address on a state id
 

pikes peak 69

Active member
YES YOU CAN.
No where in the law prevents that in in fact most Attorney's will recommend you do get a PO Box.

pp69


now that caregivers need to send a copy of a photo id, will you be denied if you put a p.o. box for the address? i dont think you can put a P.O. box as your address on a state id
 

BIOJenn

Member
ok how is a po box a great investment..dont you have to show valid id to get a po box..? and if you are going as far as getting legal or getting a card why would you look to lie about certain info..dont you think lieing will only make things worse when they do find out.? if you have to lie then their is prob good reason for that and even more reason to look into you and what your doing..and if your going to lie why get the med card anyway? med cards are for sick people and people in real need so why would an honestly sick person need to lie on any form etc?
?:yeahthats
 

rudeboy52

Member
what i am trying to figure out is if i will be denied if my drivers license address doesn't match the p.o. box address that i give them
sorry to repost my question, im still just a little confused about this
 
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BIOJenn

Member
yea my question has yet to be answered... so why is a po box a wise choice?? dont you have to show you DL eather way?? eather way if they want to find you its not that hard with all the other info they have to go on :)O
 

SELFHEMPLOYED

सदस्य
Veteran
yea my question has yet to be answered... so why is a po box a wise choice?? dont you have to show you DL eather way?? eather way if they want to find you its not that hard with all the other info they have to go on :)O

A P.O. Box is useful for several reasons. By law plants do not have to be registered to a physical address. This is great because you can register ALL cards to one P.O. Box and use them more effectively. The purpose of the P.O. Box is not to hide that you are a caregiver it is to not register yourself to a certain physical address. I can't see any way that LEO could come a knockin to check plant count based on any information they could get from the registry, after all they can only call to verify if you are a patient, NOT get your address. Lets say hypothetically someone were to have two different grows. It behooves them to have a P.O. Box with all cards registered to it because if LEO does come to either place you check out. Does that answer your Q?
 
A P.O. Box is useful for several reasons. By law plants do not have to be registered to a physical address. This is great because you can register ALL cards to one P.O. Box and use them more effectively. The purpose of the P.O. Box is not to hide that you are a caregiver it is to not register yourself to a certain physical address. I can't see any way that LEO could come a knockin to check plant count based on any information they could get from the registry, after all they can only call to verify if you are a patient, NOT get your address. Lets say hypothetically someone were to have two different grows. It behooves them to have a P.O. Box with all cards registered to it because if LEO does come to either place you check out. Does that answer your Q?

my point exactly..thanks for making it clear.
 

nattynattygurrl

Natalie J. Puffington
Veteran
Hash...Illegal or Legal?

Hash...Illegal or Legal?

Hi, i hope this post is ok in this forum, it relates to CO MMJ laws, so i figured this was probably a good spot. Anyways, here's my question:

I've been hearing recently that hash is illegal?

However it's still being sold in some shops out here, (small town in western CO, where the disp. owners are not very knowledgeable, generally speaking.)
Today i stopped into a disp. that just opened up, just to check out the shop. The owner seemed to be a pretty knowledgeable guy, relative to the other disp. owners around here. (Ideally, the budtender should know more about herb than i do. lol. An example of the knowlege base around here: one shop owner turned away bubble b/c "it looked like sand"; he told the guy it wasn't bubble, "bubble should be black", and told him to "get that shit out of my shop!" lol.) ....So today when i asked if they had any hash, he said they are only selling what he called "cryogenic" honey oil, (not sure if it's really "cryogenic" or not, i'm just finding out about this stuff recently; but i thought cryo was usually white or golden in color; this looked like purple rock candy, w/ viable golden crystals, and not at all oily, in a baseball size chunk.) When i asked if they might be getting some bubble in the near future, the budtender went on a tirade about how all hash is illegal, except for this "cryo honey oil". He went on to say "you'd get taken straight to jail if caught in CO w/ bubble". To which i responded, 'well don't you think a cop would just look at the cryo and think it was hash anyways? How is some small town copper supposed to tell the difference between this 'cryo' honey oil and any other kind of hash, until they tested it in a lab? He instructed me to 'tell the cop it's "honey", not hash, and to do the 'burn test' in front of the cop'. LOL!! He said the "cryogenic will completely melt"...i asked how that's different from really good 'full melt' bubble? He said FMB doesn't melt completely the way this "cryogenic" stuff does.

Regardless, do you really think they're teaching small town cops all these distinctions? :bigeye: i have my doubts. I have however, heard a couple other disp. owners mention hash being illegal in the past, but they explained the "exception" differently: another shop owner told me that they just call it "bubble alternative" to get around the law. :chin: So i guess it's the name itself, the word hash, that makes it illegal then? lol. :chin: This all sounded like utter nonsense to me.

Anyways, if anyone could shed some light on any of this i would certainly appreciate it. :) Thanks!

Hope this finds you all doing well! :smoke:
 

pikes peak 69

Active member
The law mentions concentrates as being legal. Done story.
pp69


Hi, i hope this post is ok in this forum, it relates to CO MMJ laws, so i figured this was probably a good spot. Anyways, here's my question:

I've been hearing recently that hash is illegal?

However it's still being sold in some shops out here, (small town in western CO, where the disp. owners are not very knowledgeable, generally speaking.)
Today i stopped into a disp. that just opened up, just to check out the shop. The owner seemed to be a pretty knowledgeable guy, relative to the other disp. owners around here. (Ideally, the budtender should know more about herb than i do. lol. An example of the knowlege base around here: one shop owner turned away bubble b/c "it looked like sand"; he told the guy it wasn't bubble, "bubble should be black", and told him to "get that shit out of my shop!" lol.) ....So today when i asked if they had any hash, he said they are only selling what he called "cryogenic" honey oil, (not sure if it's really "cryogenic" or not, i'm just finding out about this stuff recently; but i thought cryo was usually white or golden in color; this looked like purple rock candy, w/ viable golden crystals, and not at all oily, in a baseball size chunk.) When i asked if they might be getting some bubble in the near future, the budtender went on a tirade about how all hash is illegal, except for this "cryo honey oil". He went on to say "you'd get taken straight to jail if caught in CO w/ bubble". To which i responded, 'well don't you think a cop would just look at the cryo and think it was hash anyways? How is some small town copper supposed to tell the difference between this 'cryo' honey oil and any other kind of hash, until they tested it in a lab? He instructed me to 'tell the cop it's "honey", not hash, and to do the 'burn test' in front of the cop'. LOL!! He said the "cryogenic will completely melt"...i asked how that's different from really good 'full melt' bubble? He said FMB doesn't melt completely the way this "cryogenic" stuff does.

Regardless, do you really think they're teaching small town cops all these distinctions? :bigeye: i have my doubts. I have however, heard a couple other disp. owners mention hash being illegal in the past, but they explained the "exception" differently: another shop owner told me that they just call it "bubble alternative" to get around the law. :chin: So i guess it's the name itself, the word hash, that makes it illegal then? lol. :chin: This all sounded like utter nonsense to me.

Anyways, if anyone could shed some light on any of this i would certainly appreciate it. :) Thanks!

Hope this finds you all doing well! :smoke:
 

nattynattygurrl

Natalie J. Puffington
Veteran
"The law mentions concentrates as being legal. Done story." pp69

That was the impression i was always under, but they made it sound as though it was a recent change, so i wasn't sure; thought i'd ask. i wonder why there is so much misinformation out here? :chin:

Thanks for the quick reply! :)
 
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