Ohio_Patient_Network

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Home Legal

Ohio Marihuana Laws

The following summary of marihuana laws in Ohio is provided by the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws; please be advised this information is for reference only and local law in your jurisdiction may carry stiffer penalties. Please seek the advice of professional council if you have been arrested for a drug law violation. OPN members may request a legal referral by emailing This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it Others may use the legal references provided by NORML

Incarceration

Fine
Possession
Less than 100 gcivil citationnone$100
100 g to 200 gmisdemeanor nonevariable
200 g to 1000 gmisdemeanor6 months - 1 yearvariable
1000 g to 5000 g felony 1 - 5 yearsvariable
5000 g to 20,000 gfelony 1 - 5 years**variable
20,000 g or morefelony8 years MMS*variable
*Mandatory minimum sentence.
**Presumption of prison.
Cultivation
Less than 100 gcivil citiationnone$100
100 g to 200 gmisdemeanor 30 daysvariable
200 g to 1000 gfelony1 yearvariable
1000 g to 5000 g felony 1 - 5 yearsvariable
5000 g to 20,000 gfelony 1 - 5 years**variable
20,000 g or morefelony2 years MMS*variable
Any possession less than 5,000 may be probation only.
*Mandatory minimum sentence.
**Presumption of prison
Sale
20 g or less (is considered possession)civil citationnone$100
Less than 200 gmisdemeanor or felony
6 - 18 months
variable
200 g to 600 gfelony
1 - 5 years
variable
600 g or morefelony6 months MMS*variable
To minors within 1,000 feet of school, within 100 feet of a juvenile, and previous felony drug convictions felonyincreased penaltyincreased penalty
*Mandatory minimum sentence.
Miscellaneous (paraphernalia, license suspensions, drug tax stamps, etc...)
Paraphernalia possession misdemeanor30 days$750
Paraphernalia salemisdemeanor90 days$1,000
Any conviction causes driver''s license suspension for 6 months to 5 years.
Professional licenses are suspended.
Details
Possession of less than 100 grams of marijuana is a citable offense only, with a fine of $100. No criminal record is created by such citation. Possession of 100 grams or more is punishable by a fine of up to $250. For possession of 200 grams or more, the penalty increases to a possible sentence of 6 months - one year in jail. Possession of 1,000 grams or more is punishable by 1 - 5 years in prison. Any possession of less than 5,000 grams does not carry the presumption of prison, which leaves available the possibility of probation. Possession of 5,000 grams of marijuana or more is punishable by 1 - 5 years in prison. For any amount or 20,000 grams or more the penalty increases to a mandatory minimum sentence of eight years in prison.

Sale or delivery of 20 grams or less, for no remuneration, is considered possession and is punished with a fine of $100. Sale or distribution of less than 200 grams carries a penalty of 6 - 18 months in jail. Sale or distribution of 200 grams or more is punishable by 1 - 5 years in prison. Sale or distribution of 600 grams or greater carries a mandatory minimum sentence of six months and a possible 2 - 8 year sentence.

Sale to minors, sale within 1,000 feet of a school, sale within 100 feet of a juvenile, and previous felony drug convictions all increase the penalty for the sale or distribution of marijuana.

Possession of paraphernalia is punishable by up to 30 days in jail and sale of paraphernalia is punishable by up to 90 days in jail.

For all drug convictions, the offender''s driver''s license may also be suspended for a period of 6 months - 5 years. This does not apply to minor misdemeanor violations for marijuana possess.  Professional licenses may also be suspended.

Last Updated on Friday, 23 January 2009 11:49  

Medical Marijuana News

Maternal Tobacco and Alcohol Use, But Not Marijuana, Associated With Psychotic Symptoms In Offspring, Study Says

Wales, United Kingdom: The maternal use of tobacco and alcohol during pregnancy is linked with increased incidences of psychotic symptoms in adolescents, according to the results of a longitudinal study published in the October issue of The British Journal of Psychiatry.

Investigators at the University of Bristol in Great Britain assessed whether maternal use of tobacco, alcohol, or cannabis during pregnancy increased the risk of psychotic symptoms in their offspring. Researchers examined the drug use habits of the mothers of over 6,300 adolescents – approximately 12 percent of which exhibited some symptoms of psychosis.

Authors concluded: "Frequency of maternal tobacco use during pregnancy was associated with increased risk of suspect or definite psychotic symptoms (in offspring.) Maternal alcohol use shows a non-linear association with psychotic symptoms, with this effect almost exclusively in the offspring of women drinking >21 units (approximately a half-pint of beer or a glass of wine) weekly. Maternal cannabis was not associated with psychotic symptoms."

For more information, please contact Paul Armentano, NORML Deputy Director, at: paul@norml.org. Full text of the study, "Maternal tobacco, cannabis and alcohol use during pregnancy and risk of adolescent psychotic symptoms in offspring," appears in the British Journal of Psychiatry.