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SAM KAMIN AND VIVA MOFFAT JANUARY 28, 2015 Marijuana Regulation and Intellectual Property
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Stages of Marijuana Regulation Federal Prohibition (1937-present) Medical Marijuana (1996-present) Legalization (Nov 2012-present)
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The Colorado Marijuana Business 4 Types of Licensed Businesses: grow, MIP, retail, testing State regulations govern these entities Background check Residency Requirement Other Entities Aren’t Licensed
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Federal Prohibition under the CSA Marijuana Is a Schedule I Narcotic Legislative and Legal Challenges to Schedule I status consistently fail Gonzales v. Raich, 545 U.S. 1 (2005) United States v. Oakland Cannabis Buyers’ Cooperative, 532 U.S. 483 (2001)
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Federal Views on State Experimentation with Marijuana Law Reform Prior to Legalization Ogden Memo – October 2009 – Cole Memo I – June 2011– After Legalization: Cole Memo II – August 2013 – Federal enforcement kept in abeyance as long as states competently manage 8 federal priorities.
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Continuing Tensions The Cole Memo Brought Needed Clarity, but… It is an act of prosecutorial grace Administrative priorities could change – administration could change Feds could decide a state is not meeting its obligations
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Ancillary Consequences Employment (Coats v. Dish Network, 303 P.3d 147, 149 (Colo. App. 2013)) Contract (Hammer v. Today’s Health Care II, CV2011-051310, Superior Court of Arizona, Maricopa County, April 17, 2012.)
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More Ancillary Consequences Banking – FinCEN announcement hasn’t been much help. Taxation –280E Public Benefits public housing, student loans, etc.
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Even More Ancillary Consequences – Access to Law and Lawyers Rule 1.2(d) Comment 14 – lawyers may “assist a client in conduct that the lawyer reasonably believes is permitted” by state law. Local Rule D.C.COLO.L.Atty.R. 2(b)(2) – Attorneys may counsel re: CO marijuana laws, but may not “assist a client in conduct that the lawyer reasonably believes is permitted by” such laws.
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Intellectual Property Consequences The fact that marijuana sale, possession, and use remains a federal crime has profound effects on the intellectual property rights of marijuana entities in Colorado. Patent law Trademark law Copyright law
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Federal Intellectual Property Law & the Marijuana Industry Patent and trademark law are the most obvious, but both are unavailable to the marijuana industry. Trademark law has an “illegality” doctrine Patent law is effectively unavailable because of the difficulty of access to the federal courts Copyright law is available but not very useful May mean a greater reliance – and pressure – on state law doctrines
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Patent Law & Marijuana No “illegality” doctrine in patent law. Discredited version of the utility doctrine might have prohibited a patent. Federal government owns some patents on cannabinoids. A number of patents on marijuana-related processes and manufactures, as well as applications in the pipeline.
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Patent Law & Marijuana Under the current federal prohibition – patent law is likely to be relatively useless for the marijuana industry. Risk in filing for and taking ownership of a marijuana patent High chance of denial on some grounds Likely unavailability of the federal forum to protect patent rights Ethical considerations for lawyers Bottom line: unless the CSA is amended, patents unlikely to be a valuable route for the marijuana industry.
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State-level alternatives to patent law? Trade secret law Contractual mechanisms Non-disclosure/confidentiality agreements Non-competes State law property doctrines? Trespass to chattels? Conversion or theft?
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Trademark Law and Marijuana Trademark rights for the marijuana industry are clearer. Federal trademark law does have an illegality doctrine, and it has been asserted to deny registration for marks for businesses that manufacture or sell marijuana. Ancillary businesses can and do receive federal trademark rights Also, Colorado marijuana businesses might not be able to register marks because of the “use in commerce” requirement.
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Federally-registered trademarks – for ancillary businesses “MARIJUANA INTERNATIONAL” for “cannabis advertising and marketing” “MARIJUANAHOLIC” for “clothing” “PERFECT MARIJUANA” for “counseling services in the fields of health, herbalism and lifestyle wellness” “CANNABIZ” for “educational services” “CANNABIS COUNSEL” for “legal services”
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State law alternatives – trade name and trademark Examples: DIXIE ELIXIRS -- http://dixieelixirs.com/http://dixieelixirs.com/ THE CLINIC – http://www.thecliniccolorado.com/http://www.thecliniccolorado.com/ MEDICINE MAN -- http://www.medicinemandenver.com/http://www.medicinemandenver.com/ SWEET LEAF -- http://thesweetestleaf.com/http://thesweetestleaf.com/
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Unfair competition and deceptive trade practices Colorado Consumer Protection Act – C.R.S. § 6-1-101 et seq. Includes C.R.S. § 6-1-105 – Deceptive Trade Practices, which offers trademark-like prohibitions: passing off, false representations of origin, etc. Similar protections to those of the Lanham Act, but the geographic reach is obviously limited
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Copyright Law & Marijuana Copyright protection is available – no illegality doctrine, first amendment principles permit expression that includes depictions of illegal drugs and drug use. But, copyright is probably not that useful to the marijuana industries. That is, they don’t need it much.
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A possible silver lining? How much innovation can and will happen in the (relative) absence of intellectual property protection?
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