I understand that perspective, and I suppose that is why I am reluctant to spend any further time trying to reverse the charges. But my drive is for patients like me that don't dare risk losing their MMJ license (so won't medicate in a park for example), and must medicate on a regular schedule for the pain-reducing qualities to be effective, this is a circumstance in which smoking in the room can't be avoided else they must suffer with what is sually chronic or debillitating pain, so for this condition of no fault or control of one's own, I don't feel one should be rightfully fined for this occurance. For patients like me, edibles are not an effective means of managing pain, while smoking is reliable, effective and easy to measure (or predict) its effects. But they also have a right to enforce no-smoking in their hotel, so their right as personal property owners may bbe greater than my rights to medicate on a portion of their property I am renting for a night.