An Analysis of the Three Amicus Briefs Filed With U.S. Supreme Court in the Case Canna Provisions v. Bondi

The U.S. Supreme Court is expected to decide by December 15 whether it will hear Canna Provisions v. Bondi, a case many legal observers describe as the most serious challenge to federal marijuana prohibition in decades.

Supreme Court Chambers (photo credit: Getty Images/iStockphoto).

The petition asks the Court to reconsider, limit, or overturn its 2005 precedent in Gonzales v. Raich, which allowed the federal government to criminalize marijuana activity that occurs entirely within one state.

Three influential organizations have filed amicus briefs urging the Court to take up the case: Americans for Prosperity Foundation (AFPF), the Cato Institute, and Pacific Legal Foundation (PLF) on behalf of petitioner Michael Colosi. Although they come from slightly different ideological backgrounds, all three briefs deliver overlapping arguments: that Congress has exceeded its constitutional authority, that Raich was wrongly decided, and that the Controlled Substances Act (CSA) cannot constitutionally reach wholly intrastate, state-regulated marijuana activity.

Below is a detailed breakdown of the background of each organization, the key arguments advanced, and the central similarities and differences between the briefs.


The Three Amici

Americans for Prosperity Foundation (AFPF)

AFPF is a national nonprofit focused on limited government, federalism, and constitutional restraints on federal power. Its brief emphasizes structural constitutional protections, individual liberty, and restoring limits on Congress’s authority over intrastate economic activity.

Cato Institute

Cato is a libertarian think tank founded in 1977. Its amicus philosophy centers on limiting federal power, promoting individual liberty, and maintaining the constitutional balance between the states and the federal government. Its brief focuses heavily on the original public meaning of the Commerce Clause.

Pacific Legal Foundation (PLF)

PLF is a nonprofit public-interest law firm known for property-rights and separation-of-powers litigation. Its brief is submitted on behalf of Florida homeowner Michael Colosi, whose own lawsuit challenges federal authority over an intrastate endangered species. PLF uses this parallel to highlight what it sees as the broader consequences of unchecked Commerce Clause expansion.


Core Similarities in the Arguments

Despite being filed by separate entities, the three briefs share several major themes:

1. All argue that the CSA cannot constitutionally apply to state-regulated, wholly intrastate marijuana activity.

Each brief highlights that the businesses involved operate entirely within Massachusetts, in full compliance with state law and entirely outside interstate commerce. All three amici contend that this places the activity squarely outside federal reach under Article I.


2. All urge the Court to revisit or overturn Gonzales v. Raich (2005).

Raich upheld the federal prohibition of local medical marijuana cultivation, emphasizing a “rational basis” connection to interstate commerce. All three briefs argue that Raich was constitutionally incorrect and that its “rational basis” standard provides Congress with virtually unlimited authority.

AFPF calls Raich “a constitutional aberration” and urges that it be “squarely overruled.”

Cato describes Raich as the “high-water mark of congressional authority” and argues the Court should “restore the original understanding” of the Commerce Clause.

PLF argues Raich improperly expanded federal power and that Canna Provisions offers the best opportunity in decades to correct course.


3. All emphasize originalism and the Founders’ intent.

Each brief argues that at the time of the founding, “commerce” meant trade—not manufacturing, agriculture, possession, or wholly local conduct—and that the Framers explicitly rejected giving Congress a general police power.

All briefs cite similar sources such as The Federalist Papers, early dictionaries, founding debates, and pre-New Deal precedent.


4. All argue the Necessary and Proper Clause cannot bootstrap unrelated intrastate activity into federal power.

The briefs argue that:

  • The clause requires a meaningful means-end connection.

  • The CSA’s application to intrastate marijuana is not “proper” because it invades states’ traditional police powers.

  • Congress cannot regulate an entire category of local activity merely because it claims it affects national policy.

Each amicus directly analyzes the Necessary and Proper Clause’s original public meaning.


5. All highlight federalism and state sovereignty.

Each brief stresses that marijuana legalization is a core exercise of state police powers. They emphasize that Massachusetts—and 23 other states—have chosen to regulate adult-use marijuana, and that federal overreach undermines the balance of federalism envisioned by the Constitution.

AFPF focuses heavily on structural liberty protections.
Cato frames the issue as preserving the Constitution’s “liberty-preserving structure.”
PLF highlights the real-world impacts on property owners and state-regulated areas.


Key Differences in the Arguments

Although unified in their broad goals, the briefs diverge in tone, framing, and emphasis.

1. AFPF focuses on federalism and structural constitutional safeguards.

AFPF’s brief spends significant time on the architecture of the Constitution—dual sovereignty, checks on federal authority, and state policymaking. It argues:

  • The CSA intrudes into state police powers.

  • The federal government lacks a general police power.

  • Preserving federalism protects individual liberty.

AFPF is also the most explicit about urging the Court to overrule Raich.


2. Cato focuses most heavily on original meaning and historical sources.

Cato’s brief dives deeply into:

  • Eighteenth-century dictionary definitions

  • Founding-era newspapers

  • State ratification debates

It argues that:

  • “Commerce” meant trade

  • “Among the several states” meant between people of different states

  • The Necessary and Proper Clause cannot expand enumerated powers

Cato’s brief is the most historically detailed and academically oriented.


3. PLF frames the case around property rights and broader federal overreach.

PLF uses the example of its client, a Florida homeowner burdened by federal endangered-species regulations, to illustrate how Commerce Clause expansion affects everyday Americans. PLF argues:

  • Federal regulatory power increasingly reaches local land use.

  • Raich and related precedents have eroded constitutional boundaries.

  • Taking Canna Provisions would help restore limits on federal power.

PLF’s analysis is the most focused on real-world impacts and individual rights.


Broader Context: Why Canna Provisions v. Bondi Matters

The petition has generated significant national interest because:

  • Twenty-four states now have legal adult-use marijuana.

  • Forty states have medical marijuana programs.

  • The federal government continues to treat marijuana as a Schedule I narcotic.

  • Congress remains gridlocked on reform, and administrative rescheduling efforts are uncertain.

The case directly challenges the foundation of federal marijuana prohibition. If the Court grants review, it could:

  • Reconsider or overturn Raich

  • Limit Congress’s Commerce Clause authority

  • Allow state-regulated marijuana markets to operate without federal liability

  • Shift the balance of federal-state relations across many policy areas

The Court’s decision on whether to take the case is expected on or shortly after December 15.


Conclusion

The three amicus briefs filed in Canna Provisions v. Bondi—AFPF, the Cato Institute, and PLF—form a coordinated critique of federal marijuana prohibition as applied to intrastate, state-regulated commerce. They differ in emphasis, but all converge on the same conclusion:

The Constitution does not allow Congress to criminalize purely intrastate marijuana activity occurring under comprehensive state regulation—and the Supreme Court should take this case to correct its own precedents.

The upcoming decision on certiorari will determine whether the Court is ready to revisit Raich and reconsider the scope of federal authority over marijuana nearly 20 years later.

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