A quadriplegic medical marijuana patient, Brandon Coats took DISH Network to the Colorado Supreme Court after he was fired for off-hours cannabis use.
A quadriplegic medical marijuana patient, Brandon Coats sued DISH Network in 2010 after firing him for off-hours cannabis use.Brandon Coats, an advocate for an employee's right to use medical marijuana, has passed away.
"He was trying to be as normal as possible by having a freaking job, and society said, 'You can't,'" she recalls. DISH"even said they didn't have any problem with Brandon. He was one of their best employees." Coats's termination occurred before Colorado legalized recreational marijuana, and his case highlighted a dilemma that's only grown since Amendment 64 passed: Although his marijuana use was legal, Colorado has no laws that protect employees who test positive for THC in a work-related drug test, even if the marijuana use is legal and it's consumed off-hours.Colorado NORML
In the years following his court case, Coats's celebrity cooled off, but he didn't stop fighting. He testified at the Colorado Capitol many times in support of legislation that would protect employee marijuana use off the job. He did so, even though it took him hours to get out of bed, dressed and to the Capitol.
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