logo
Login Subscribe
Google Play App Store
  • News
    • Obituaries
    • Lifestyle
    • Opinion
  • Sports
  • E-edition
  • Public Notices
  • Calendar
  • Archives
  • Contact
    • Contact Us
    • Advertisers
    • Form Submission
    • About Us
    • News
      • Obituaries
      • Lifestyle
      • Opinion
    • Sports
    • E-edition
    • Public Notices
    • Calendar
    • Archives
    • Contact
      • Contact Us
      • Advertisers
      • Form Submission
      • About Us
State appeals court: moms who use medical marijuana while pregnant aren’t breaking the law
News
July 25, 2024
State appeals court: moms who use medical marijuana while pregnant aren’t breaking the law
By BRIANNA BAILEY BRIANNA@READFRONTIER.COM

Women with state medical cards who use marijuana during pregnancy can’t be prosecuted for child neglect, the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals ruled Thursday.

Amanda Aguilar has been waiting nearly four years for the ruling. She was charged with felony child neglect in Kay County in 2020 after her son tested positive for marijuana at birth, but fought her charge. A single mother of five, the case has caused her endless worry and to lose job opportunities, she said.

“I might have actually laid down if this had been a fight over any other thing,” Aguilar said Thursday after learning the court had ruled in her favor. “But because it was over my kids, that was the reason I didn’t give up.”

Aguilar’s case was first featured in a 2022 story by The Frontier and The Marshall Project. She used medical marijuana to treat severe morning sickness during her pregnancy. Aguilar had a doctor-approved state license to use it and her son was born healthy. But the hospital reported her to child welfare workers, who handed over her baby’s drug test results to police.

The ruling sets a new legal precedent in Oklahoma, where a growing number of women have faced child neglect charges for using marijuana during their pregnancies, even when they have a license from the state to use it legally.

Aguilar said she’s glad the decision will make a difference in the lives of other mothers facing criminal charges. The Frontier and The Marshall Project reported earlier this year that most women who are prosecuted are too poor to afford their own attorneys and that the cases hinge mostly on information gathered by child welfare workers. Most women accept plea agreements in exchange for probation.

“There’s so many moms that are going to take these charges just because they’re terrified,” Aguilar said.

The court ruled that it does not condone marijuana use for pregnant women, but that it’s legal in Oklahoma.

“For us to find that Aguilar’s marijuana use, fully authorized by her medical marijuana card, became illegal due to her pregnancy, would require us to rewrite the statutes in a way we simply do not think is appropriate for courts to do,” Presiding Judge Scott Rowland wrote in the court’s majority opinion.

The court urged the Legislature to consider changing the law to allow women to be criminally charged.

Two judges dissented, arguing that Aguilar’s unborn son did not have his own medical marijuana license and that it was not the intent of voters or the Legislature to allow unborn children to be exposed to the drug when they passed medical marijuana laws.

Aguilar’s case was one of at least five in the past year that Kay County judges threw out after defense attorneys argued that medical marijuana is legal in Oklahoma and that the women hadn’t committed a crime. Kay County District Attorney Brian Hermanson has prosecuted dozens of women in his district for child neglect after they used drugs during pregnancy, many for using medical marijuana.

Hermanson appealed Aguilar’s and another woman’s case, arguing the mothers broke the law because their unborn children did not have their own, separate licenses to use medical marijuana. The Frontier has reached out to Hermanson’s office for comment.

Christmas classics shine in counties lighted parades
A: Main, News...
Christmas classics shine in counties lighted parades
By SHAUNA BELYEU GENERAL MANAGER 
December 11, 2025
Streets were packed down Broadway in Checotah and Main Street in Eufaula as lights sparkled with holiday magic and the county kicked off the holiday season with two annual Lighted Christmas Parades. B...
this is a test
Shop with a Cop Dec. 105 11,12
A: Main, lifestyle...
Shop with a Cop Dec. 105 11,12
December 11, 2025
The 12th Annual McIntosh County Law Enforcement Shop with a COP event will take place this week on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. Law enforcement officers, in partnership with school districts, will ...
this is a test
Driver killed after hitting deer
A: Main, News...
Driver killed after hitting deer
December 11, 2025
An unidentified motorist was killed after striking a deer and then a second vehicle on SH 16 in Muskogee County Friday. According to the Oklahoma Highway Patrol, after the car struck the deer the vehi...
this is a test
School election filing period ends
A: Main, News...
School election filing period ends
December 11, 2025
Just as the filing ended for school elections, Eufaula bent Kenny Bumgarner an nounced his resignation. Bumgarner, 55, represent ed seat 2. The board will ap point someone to fill his un expired term....
this is a test
Eufaula launches search for City Planner to guide growth
A: Main, News...
Eufaula launches search for City Planner to guide growth
By SHAUNA BELYEU GENERAL MANAGER 
December 11, 2025
The City of Eufaula is taking a major step toward shaping its long-term future by launching the recruitment for its first-ever City Planner, a move that city leaders believe is vital to supporting res...
this is a test
Checotah resident pleads guilty to distributing Methamphetamine
A: Main, News...
Checotah resident pleads guilty to distributing Methamphetamine
December 11, 2025
The United States Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Oklahoma announces that Joshua Darrin Breshears, age 33, of Checotah, Oklahoma, entered a guilty plea to one count of Distribution of Me...
this is a test
ePaper
coogle_play
app_store
Editor Picks
Christmas Candy Corn Fun
A: Main, News...
Christmas Candy Corn Fun
December 11, 2025
Stop by Peoples National Bank and put in your best guess for how many candy corns are in the jar! The closest guess will win a festive gift basket featuring items from local Checotah merchants. Entrie...
this is a test
Campbells celebrate 50 years
A: Main, News...
Campbells celebrate 50 years
December 11, 2025
Don and Jeanie Campbell recently celebrated their 50th Wedding Anniversary at Checotah Perk, located at 319 W. Gentry Ave. in their little hometown. Owner Jamie (Spindle) Hilbert hosted the anniversar...
this is a test
Eufaula Area Arts celebrates with a Christmas Gathering
Community Calendar, lifestyle...
Eufaula Area Arts celebrates with a Christmas Gathering
By GLENNA MCBRIDE, DIRECTOR, EUFAULA AREA ARTS 
December 11, 2025
The Eufaula Area Arts Council invites you to experience the magic of the holidays with a festive Christmas Gathering on Tuesday, December 16, at the Chamber of Commerce building at 301 North Main, fea...
this is a test
Breakfast with Santa Dec. 13
Community Calendar, lifestyle...
Breakfast with Santa Dec. 13
December 11, 2025
Legacy on Main Street, 224 N. Main St., Eufaula, presents Breakfast with Santa on Saturday, Dec. 13. Doors open at 8:30 a.m. Tickets are $15, which includes one adult and one child breakfast. If you n...
this is a test
EOSC receives $16 million donation
News
EOSC receives $16 million donation
December 11, 2025
WILBURTON – Eastern Oklahoma State College has received an unprecedented $16 million unrestricted gift from philanthropist MacKenzie Scott through her foundation, Yield Giving. This donation marks the...
this is a test
Facebook
Twitter
Tweets
Twitter
Tweets

MCINTOSH COUNTY DEMOCRAT
300-A S. Broadway
Checotah, OK
74426

(918) 473-2313

This site complies with ADA requirements

© 2023 Mcintosh Democrat

  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Accessibility Policy