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LA Asks Judge to Shut Down Medical Pot Shops

LOS ANGELES (CBS/AP) -- The Los Angeles city attorney filed a lawsuit
Thursday asking a judge to support the city's move to shut down
more than 130 medical marijuana shops under a new ordinance.
The city clerk determined that only 41 pot shops comply with the
ordinance, surprising city officials who aimed to allow 70 clinics
in the city.
The countersuit asks a judge to determine that the city's
interpretation of the ordinance was appropriate.
The new law passed in January and seeks to regulate the clinics,
hundreds of which popped up after officials failed to enforce a
2007 moratorium on medical pot clinics.
The regulations require dispensaries to have been registered
with the city previously and owners to pass a background check.
Later the Building and Safety Department will inspect the
dispensaries' locations to make sure they are 1,000 feet from
schools, parks and other gathering sites, city attorney spokesman
Frank Mateljan said. Each dispensary's pot must be tested at an
independent lab.
Mateljan said his office won't try to close any clinics before
the court rules.
He said 132 clinics were ineligible because of a change in
ownership or management. Other shops were ineligible because they
moved more than once or their owners didn't complete or pass a
background check.
About 30 lawsuits have already been filed challenging the city's
process of evaluating clinics. Most were filed by some of the 400
ordered to shut down in June when the ordinance went into effect.
"They're going beyond a strict interpretation of the ordinance
and doing anything they can to figure out how they can disqualify
them," said James Shaw, who runs a downtown pot clinic and
represents the Union of Medical Marijuana Patients. "This is not
what the city council intended. The city attorney wants to shut
everyone down."
More clinics will be chosen by lottery to bring the total to 70,
Mateljan said.
"This is simply the initial qualifying round," he said. "The
spirit of the law will be upheld by the time we get to the end of
the process. We're moving very deliberately to strike a balance
between allowing access to medical marijuana and making sure the
laws of the city are upheld."

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