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At least 91K signatures verified for Arkansas marijuana amendment, officials confirm

On Friday, Arkansas officials confirmed that the Arkansas Medical Marijuana Amendment received at least 91,000 verified signatures.

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — On Friday, Arkansas officials have confirmed that at least 91,000 signatures were verified as part of the Arkansas Medical Marijuana Amendment of 2024. 

This comes after the Arkansas Supreme Court ordered Secretary of State John Thurston to verify the remaining signatures submitted during the cure period. Following the count, the verification states that the submitted signatures are more than the required 90,704.

"I can confirm that no less than 91,000 signatures were verified pursuant to the counting as ordered by the Arkansas Supreme Court," said Leslie Bellamy, Director of Elections at the Arkansas Secretary of State.

The original order from the Arkansas Supreme Court came after Thurston initially said that the marijuana proposal fell short due to a signature requirement. 

The effort, the Arkansas Medical Marijuana Amendment of 2024, aims to expand access to medical marijuana by qualified patients.

This would allow certain medical professionals to certify patients, expand the list of qualifying medical conditions, and more.

A day after Thurston's initial denial of the proposal, the sponsor of the measure announced a lawsuit against Thurston for how he handled the signatures of the medical marijuana amendment. 

Arkansans for Patient Access (APA), the ballot committee sponsoring the proposed medical marijuana amendment, filed the lawsuit which challenged Thurston's decision not to count about 28,413 signatures and asking the Arkansas Supreme Court to certify their measure for the ballot ahead of the start of early voting on Oct. 21.

According to documents, APA submitted over 150,000 voter signatures supporting the proposed amendment, surpassing the required 90,704.

However, Thurston sent a letter to the group stating that 10,521 of the signatures submitted during the cure period were valid, bringing the total to 88,040.

In the lawsuit, APA argued that Thurston wrongfully refused to validate and count signatures because some of the group's paid canvassers were not registered before collecting signatures.

    

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