Medical Marijuana: Now In Vending Machines
Los Angeles To Provide Authorized Users With 24-Hour Access
-
Play CBS Video Video Cannabis Machine Hits L.A. A vending machine for medical marijuana and other prescriptions is making its debut in Los Angeles. Soon the cannabis dispensers will be available throughout California. Jennifer Sabih reports.
-
Los Angeles medical-cannabis dispensary owner Vincent Mehdizadeh poses with his new Marijuana vending machine installed at the Herbal Nutrition Center in Los Angeles, Tuesday, Jan. 29, 2008. The black, armored machine is bolted to the floor and dispenses medical-cannabis to patients who provide a doctor's prescription and special identification card and their fingerprints. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)
-
Interactive HealthWatch Explore health issues including AIDS, cancer and antibiotics.
Patients suffering from chronic pain, loss of appetite and other ailments that marijuana is said to alleviate can get their pot with a dose of convenience at the Herbal Nutrition Center, where a large machine will dole out the drug around the clock.
“Convenient access, lower prices, safety, anonymity,” inventor and owner Vincent Mehdizadeh said, extolling the benefits of the machine.
But federal drug agents say the invention may need unplugging.
“Somebody owns (it), it's on a property and somebody fills it,” said DEA Special Agent Jose Martinez. “Once we find out where it's at, we'll look into it and see if they're violating laws.”
At least three dispensaries in the city, including two belonging to Mehdizadeh, have installed vending machines to distribute the drug to people who carry cards authorizing marijuana use.
Mehdizadeh said he spent seven months to develop and patent the black, armored box, which he calls the “PVM,” or prescription vending machine.
A sliding fence protects the tinted windows of his dispensary, barely distinguishing it from a busy thoroughfare of strip malls, automobile dealers and furniture shops. A box resembling a large refrigerator stands inside the nearly empty shop, near a few shelves stocked with vitamins and herbs.
A guard in a black T-shirt emblazoned with the word “Security” on the front stands at the door. A poster of Bob Marley decorates a back room.
The computerized machine requires fingerprint identification and a prepaid card with a magnetic stripe. Once the card and fingerprint are verified, a bright green envelope with the pot drops down a slot.
Mehdizadeh says any user approved for medical marijuana and registered in a computer database at his dispensaries can pre-purchase the drug and then use the machine to pick up.
The process provides convenience and privacy for users who may otherwise feel uncomfortable about buying marijuana, Mehdizadeh said.
At the Timothy Leary Medical Dispensary in the San Fernando Valley, the vending machine is accessible only during business hours. An employee there said the machine was introduced about five months ago, and provides speedy service.
“It helps a lot of patients who are in a lot of pain and don't want to wait around to get help,” Robert Schwartz said. “It's been working out great.”
Mehdizadeh said he sought the advice of doctors, and decided to limit the amount of marijuana per user to an ounce per week. Each purchase from the machine yields 1/8th or 2/8th of an ounce. By eliminating a vendor behind the counter, he said, the machine offers users lower drug prices. The 1/8th ounce packet would cost about $40 - $20 lower than the average price at other dispensaries.
A spokesman for a marijuana advocacy group said the machine also benefits dispensary owners.
“It limits the number of workers in the store in the event of a raid, and it'll make it harder for theft,” said Nathan Sands, of The Compassionate Coalition.
Marijuana use is illegal under federal law, which does not recognize the medical marijuana laws in California and 11 other states.
The Drug Enforcement Agency and other federal agencies have been actively shutting down major medical marijuana dispensaries throughout the state over the last two years and charging their operators with felony distribution charges.
Mehdizadeh said the Herbal Nutrition Center was the target of a federal raid in December. He said no arrests were made and no charges have been filed against him.
Kris Hermes, a spokesman for advocacy group Americans for Safe Access, said the machine might benefit those who already know how much and what strain of marijuana they're looking for. But he said others will want to see and smell the drug before they buy it.
A man who said he has been authorized to use medical marijuana as part of his anger management therapy said the vending machine's security measures would at least protect against illicit use of the drug.
“You have kids that want to get high and that's not what marijuana is for,” Robert Miko said. “It's to medicate.”
©MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- Y''all see that you can''t comment on the newer pot article? They know it''s BS, and don''t want anyone to speak their minds on it. Thanks, CBS!!!
- Reply to this comment
- %u201CYou have kids that want to get high and that''s not what marijuana is for,%u201D Robert Miko said. %u201CIt''s to medicate.%u201D
Aww! It''s -not- for getting high? D''oh! I''ve been using it wrong all this time!
"A man who said he has been authorized to use medical marijuana as part of his anger management therapy..."
O_O I have anger! Gimme gimme gimme! - Reply to this comment
- COPS SAY LEGALIZE MARIJUANA!
After nearly four decades of fueling the U.S. policy of a war on drugs with over a trillion tax dollars and 37 million arrests for nonviolent drug offenses, our confined population has quadrupled making building prisons the fastest growing industry in the United States. More than 2.2 million of our citizens are currently incarcerated and every year we arrest an additional 1.9 million more guaranteeing those prisons will be bursting at their seams. Every year we choose to continue this war will cost U.S. taxpayers another 69 billion dollars. Despite all the lives we have destroyed and all the money so ill spent, today illicit drugs are cheaper, more potent, and far easier to get than they were 35 years ago at the beginning of the war on drugs. Meanwhile, people continue dying in our streets while drug barons and terrorists continue to grow richer than ever before. We would suggest that this scenario must be the very definition of a failed public policy. This madness must cease!
www.LEAP.cc - Reply to this comment
- is this a great country or what. hay it was just fine back in 1920. then uncle sam just had to get involved.
- Reply to this comment
- Somewhere Jeff spicoli is saying doooooood I''m so wasted
- Reply to this comment
- Wouldn''t that suck, if you put some money into the machine, and nothing comes out!!! I''d still feel safer buying the shiit through exchange with a person than a machine.
- Reply to this comment
- You have the coke machines, the snack machines, now they make weed machines. Is this a great country or what!!!
Legalize Marijuana!!! For a better, safer America!!! - Reply to this comment
- Honey, you want anything? I''m going down to the weed-o-mat.
- Reply to this comment
The road ahead in Afghanistan, and the crucial decision Obama faces.



