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How Do You Transfer Mmm Card


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Hello Everyone,

This is my first post I have not been on here that much, cause I haven't had any problems.

I'm a Caregiver and my girlfriend is my paitent, What I need to know is how do you transfer the MMM Card from Michigan to Texas? With the economy being so bad here we are moving to Texas she is already down there, Texas has a Medical Marijuana Program, I just need to find the forms to make this transfer, Can anyone here give me some help with this?

Thanks

Frank

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Hello Everyone,

This is my first post I have not been on here that much, cause I haven't had any problems.

I'm a Caregiver and my girlfriend is my paitent, What I need to know is how do you transfer the MMM Card from Michigan to Texas? With the economy being so bad here we are moving to Texas she is already down there, Texas has a Medical Marijuana Program, I just need to find the forms to make this transfer, Can anyone here give me some help with this?

Thanks

Frank

 

 

are you sure Texas has a mmj program!!!!

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are you sure Texas has a mmj program!!!!

 

QFT.

 

Texas has no program, if they had one there is no state that I know of who will qualify you based on another states card. Michigan does have reciprocity in that we accept other states card for people who are visiting.

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Texas will not honor the MM certification and it's still illegal there. Sorry about the bad news.....Not only do they not have MM certification there are a lot of dry counties down there and you will get popped for alcohol real easy. You can't even be seen drinking alcohol on your own property.

 

Dizz

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Sorry no program in Texas

 

 

Last update: May 21, 2010

 

Despite a 2004 poll showing that 75% of Texans support medical marijuana, lawmakers have yet to act to protect patients in the Lone Star State.

 

A 2009 bill that would have allowed seriously ill patients to raise a medical necessity defense to charges of possessing marijuana for medical use died in committee. The bill would have permitted physicians to make written or oral recommendations that, in the physician's medical opinion, the potential benefits of marijuana would likely outweigh the health risks for a particular patient. If arrested for possession of marijuana, a patient with a recommendation from his or her physician would have had an affirmative defense to charges arising from his or her medical use of marijuana. If a court accepts such an affirmative defense, a patient could avoid jail time and fines. Such laws (like the common law defense necessity, which one patient successfully raised in Texas) do not protect patients from initial arrest and prosecution, however.

 

Efforts to reduce penalties for marijuana possession

 

A bill was introduced in 2009 that would have reduced the penalty for possessing one ounce or less of marijuana from a Class B misdemeanor (punishable by up to six months in jail and a fine of up to $2,000) to a Class C misdemeanor (punishable by a fine of up to $500). The bill received a hearing in the House Criminal Jurisprudence Committee, but unfortunately it never received a vote. Although it would have dramatically improved the status quo, the bill would still have saddled people with a criminal record simply for possessing a substance safer than alcohol.

 

During the 2007 legislative session, Texas enacted a law allowing law enforcement officers to issue citations instead of arresting adults who possess less than four ounces of marijuana. While it still remains a crime to possess any amount of marijuana for any purpose in Texas, this citation law was definitely a step in the right direction. Although citizens are still subject to the same penalties as before, police officers now have the option of issuing a citation to offenders rather than taking them into custody.

 

This is all from http://www.mpp.org/states/texas/

 

Its current info and unlikely to change soon. Texas will not be a leader in this.

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Ok guys, I don't know if your in Texas but my girlfriend is down there and they do have a clinic in Lufkin where you can get Marijuana for medical use! One of her neighbors down there goes to the clinic weekly. Well thanks anyways.

Frank

PS Oh does anyone know about Colorado? theres a job offer for indoor grower.

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Well, you seem to know something about Texas that we or the Internet do not seem to know. Do you have any references about this Texas Medical Marijuana program? I hadn't heard of it and have family down there who aren't aware of it, so I spent a minute on searching for it. I didn't find anything much different than this, from http://www.legalmatch.com/law-library/article/marijuana-laws-in-texas.html:

 

 

 

 

The local journalists sure seem up-to-date on cultivation, though:

 

 

 

Editor's note: Sheriff Thomas Kerss was incorrectly told the confiscated marijuana was worth $6,000 per ounce. The actual value is $6,000 per pound.

 

By Donna McCollum

 

NACOGDOCHES, TX (KTRE) - Nacogdoches County Sheriff's Department hit two houses, one outside of Douglass on County Road 847 and the other near Lilbert on Farm to Market Road 343. Both are just west of Nacogdoches.

 

So far, deputies have charged Charles Thomas Smith, Timothy Gillispie, 63 and Daniel Poirier, 54 all of Nacogdoches County with engaging in organized criminal activity.

 

The alleged growers of marijuana were into hydroponics. Only one lush marijuana plant was found. Deputies suspect a harvest just occurred. They're not disappointed. They've busted up a hydroponics growing lab.

 

The trickle of water can be heard coming from a deep green marijuana plant. The leaves are healthy looking. No blemishes. If it weren't illegal, the plant would make a beautiful ornamental display in a home or yard. It's quite obvious with the absence of sunlight and even soil you can grow a very healthy mother plant capable of cloning hundreds more.

 

"You can also see they had a carbon dioxide generator there to help produce additional carbon dioxide to make the plants grow faster," pointed out Sheriff Thomas Kerss, Nacogdoches County.

 

Plants grown this way shoot up rapidly and produce plants free of stems and seeds. The dried leaves produce a high dollar drug.

 

 

 

 

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Texas will not honor the MM certification and it's still illegal there. Sorry about the bad news.....Not only do they not have MM certification there are a lot of dry counties down there and you will get popped for alcohol real easy. You can't even be seen drinking alcohol on your own property.

 

Dizz

a dry county is just that they cannot sell alcohal not that you cant drink beer in the county i lived in one in arkansas and i was born in texas .

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Big I do not know about Ark for certain but there are MANY areas down south where even having the booze in a dry county is a crime.

 

I am pretty certain it is the same in Ark (99% sure) BUT it is a think that is rarely EVER ticketed. Usually they will only write that if you get

a DUI and have some in your car (even in trunk) or especially if you are a minor in possession. My cousin in Kentucky got a MIP when he was

17 and was charged with brining alcohol into a dry county (he was drinking in the front yard of his house while playing football with friends

they neighbors called the police)

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Big I do not know about Ark for certain but there are MANY areas down south where even having the booze in a dry county is a crime.

 

I am pretty certain it is the same in Ark (99% sure) BUT it is a think that is rarely EVER ticketed. Usually they will only write that if you get

a DUI and have some in your car (even in trunk) or especially if you are a minor in possession. My cousin in Kentucky got a MIP when he was

17 and was charged with brining alcohol into a dry county (he was drinking in the front yard of his house while playing football with friends

they neighbors called the police)

 

 

t once had been considered that, since the 21st Amendment repealed national prohibition, alcohol prohibition became a state police-power issue rather than a federal commerce-power one. States (and other sovereign territories) were assumed to have the power to regulate commerce with respect to alcohol traveling to, from, or through their jurisdictions. However, while the 21st Amendment does give states the power to ban alcohol, that power is not absolute.

 

In particular, one state's ban on alcohol may not impede interstate commerce between states that permit it. The Supreme Court of the United States held in Granholm v. Heald 544 U.S. 460 (2005) that states do not have the power to regulate interstate shipments of alcoholic beverages. Therefore, it may be likely that city, county, or state legislation banning possession of alcoholic beverages by passengers of vehicles operating in interstate commerce (such as trains and interstate bus lines) would be unconstitutional, were passengers on such vehicles simply passing through the area.

 

For example, the Navajo Nation has long forbid alcohol. Even prior to Amtrak, when Santa Fe Railway's Super Chief passed through, the bar closed for the duration of the transit, but the alcohol stayed on board.

 

 

You can have alcohol in a dry county all it means is it cannot be sold there.

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Well I found out that Texas is putting Legalizing Medical Marijuana on the ballot so the residents of Texas can vote on it, I also found that if you get caught with any down there the cops will just take it. No jail time or even a ticket and all this info came from a Probation Officer. so things are changing down there.

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Well I found out that Texas is putting Legalizing Medical Marijuana on the ballot so the residents of Texas can vote on it, I also found that if you get caught with any down there the cops will just take it. No jail time or even a ticket and all this info came from a Probation Officer. so things are changing down there.

 

That is NOT set in stone!! That will GREATLY vary by country and the office you meet.

 

People are in the TX courts daily for possession charges

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