Can you be arrested for cannabis possession as a legal medical marijuana patient? Does your medical marijuana patient ID protect you in a traffic stop? How do you respond to an officer who wants to search your vehicle because he or she smells weed?
What happens when law enforcement shows up at your front door to investigate marijuana plants the neighbor says you’re growing, but you’re a legal patient and home cultivator?
With the passage of Amendment 2, legal medical cannabis became your right as Article XIV of the Missouri Constitution became law. These situations with legal cannabis patients could happen at any time. Would you know what to do?
Get the answers and facts by attending a FREE ZOOM online law seminar by one of the premier cannabis defense lawyers in Missouri.
Seminar: “Know Your Rights”
Date: Wednesday, February 24, 2021
Time: 7:30 PM Seminar Starts
Online Location: https://umsystem.zoom.us/j/97626121236
Cost: Free
Sponsored by: Missouri University NORML Chapter & Missouri NORML
Attorney Dan Viets will be conducting a one-of-a-kind seminar “Know your rights when dealing with the police.” Get your questions answered by a legal expert.
Dan has practiced criminal defense law across the state of Missouri for many years. He has represented more marijuana defendants in the past 35 years than any lawyer in Missouri!
Dan is a past president of the Missouri Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers and continues to serve on the Board of that organization. He has received many awards for his work in criminal defense, including the Missouri Lawyers Weekly 2019 Lawyer of the Year Award.
Dan served as Chair of the Board of the Campaign which legalized access to medical marijuana through the passage of Article XIV of the Missouri Constitution in 2018. Dan serves as Secretary of the national Board of Directors of NORML. His presentation Wednesday evening will discuss how one can exercise one’s Constitutional rights in order to minimize the chances of a close encounter with law enforcement and conviction of a marijuana-related charge.