Update: Ballard says HPD was wrong in seizing firearms. I don't recall in recent memory the HPD chief ever saying they were wrong, it's normally bullshit and redirecting blame. Interesting.....
Only 2 people out of the 30 "voluntarily" turned in their guns. In other words, 95% of the people that got this letter told HPD to fuck off.
“It is not illegal to possess the ones you already have,” Ballard told the Honolulu Police Commission on Wednesday. “Merely having a medical marijuana card doesn’t mean you’re using marijuana. We can’t prove you’re using marijuana. Our practice of having them turn in their firearms was incorrect.” The department is returning firearms to two people who voluntarily relinquished their guns, Ballard said.
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Ballard also said five HPD officers have been authorized to verify Department of Health marijuana registry records for firearms permit applicants, though confidential patient information is not released in that process.
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Retired state Supreme Court Justice Steven Levinson, a member of the Police Commission, questioned why the department was denying firearm permits for marijuana patients but not people using much stronger prescription drugs.
“I really can’t answer that question,” she said. “The main thing is … what federal law is telling us.”
Federal law prohibits an “unlawful user” of any controlled substance from possessing firearms, and under federal law, marijuana is a controlled substance. Ballard said that includes caregivers of cannabis patients with marijuana cards.
“I recognize the conundrum,” said Commissioner Loretta Ann Sheehan. “(But) respectfully it seems ridiculous. Keeping your old guns violates federal law. That doesn’t make any sense at all.”
“I’m a little puzzled as to why the distinction between medical marijuana and medical opioids,” he told Ballard.
Carl Bergquist, executive director of the Drug Policy Forum of Hawaii, testified before the commission that HPD should revisit the policy since medical cannabis is legal under state law.
“On behalf of physicians, nurses, caregivers and patients involved in the medical cannabis program, the assumption that they’re all impaired or a danger to society is a great insult,” he said. “A policy like this could push people out of the regulated system. We think these patients should not be stigmatized in this fashion.”
http://www.staradvertiser.com/2017/12/07/hawaii-news/hpd-in-error-over-cannabis-patients-with-guns-chief-says/?HSA=ef7ce414e218674ae3b48ae1e6ab26026109f482
wilson vs lynch no. 14-15700
The burden on Wilson’s core Second Amendment right is not
severe. Title 18 U.S.C. § 922(d)(3), 27 C.F.R. § 478.11, and
the Open Letter
bar only the sale of firearms to Wilson–not
her possession of firearms. Wilson could have amassed legal
firearms before acquiring a registry card, and 18 U.S.C.
§ 922(d)(3), 27 C.F.R. § 478.11, and the Open Letter would
WILSON V. LYNCH 15
not impede her right to keep her firearms or to use them to
protect herself and her home. In addition, Wilson could
acquire firearms and exercise her right to self-defense at any
time by surrendering her registry card, thereby demonstrating
to a firearms dealer that there is no reasonable cause to
believe she is an unlawful drug user.
https://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/opinions/2016/08/31/14-15700.pdf