Lawyer dressed as Jedi challenges city's pot ban

 CLARKSTON, Wash. (AP) — A Clarkston, Washington, attorney sued the city and four city councilors who voted to prohibit retail marijuana sales within city limits. And he did it in a Jedi costume.


Rick Laws says the city’s ban is unconstitutional. He filed the motion on Halloween on behalf of Canna4life LLC, which is scheduled to open Nov. 25, provided the business can submit a retail marijuana license to the state of Washington.

The moratorium on recreational marijuana sales within the Clarkston city limits will expire at the end of this month, The Lewiston Tribune reports (http://bit.ly/1o1HHtr). Washington legalized recreational marijuana in 2012.

Laws, who is representing Clarkston business owners Kelly and Julie Jackson, said the city and the councilors are being sued for damages in “an amount to be proved at trial.”

When reached by phone Friday night, Clarkston Mayor Kathleen Warren said she had not seen the lawsuit but the city has received notice of it.

“It wasn’t unexpected,” she said. “He has talked about suing. I wasn’t surprised at it.”

The lawsuit also seeks a statement from the court declaring a ban on marijuana sales unconstitutional.

Similar local efforts to ban retail marijuana shops have been launched in Colorado and Oregon.

Laws said his clients have “been injured by the loss of revenue for the last four months during this moratorium when they could have been open, and also for the time going forward.”

The moratorium’s initial purpose has run its course, he said.

“The moratorium was put out there with the idea that they needed time to get the zoning regulations in place,” Laws said. “Well, the zoning regulations came back from the planning commission months ago. The zoning regulations were adopted by the council weeks ago, at which time they admitted it’s happening.”