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The NORML |
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. . . a weekly service for the
media on news items related to Marijuana Prohibition.
April 24, 1997
Federal Government Raids
California Medical Marijuana Club
NORML Calls DEA Action "Federal
Piracy"
April 24, 1997, San Francisco, CA:
Federal agents confiscated 331 marijuana plants and associated
growing equipment in a raid on the Flower Therapy medical
marijuana buyers club this past Monday. The early morning
raid was the federal government's first crackdown on such a
supplier since California voters resoundingly approved legalizing
the use of marijuana for medicinal purposes.
Club operator John Hudson said that no records or other property
were taken in the raid, which occurred when no one was at the
club. According to published reports, dried marijuana that
was marked for medicinal purposes only was not seized by federal
agents, and the club has already re-opened for business. No
charges have been filed against the owners of the club.
"Only ten days since having a federal judge's temporary
restraining order block the government's 'war on doctors,'
federal officials are now launching a war on patients who need
medical marijuana," said Dave Fratello of Americans for
Medical Rights. "Disrupting the supply of medical
marijuana from one of the patient providers with tight, careful
intake procedures shows that the DEA is not interested in
preventing abuse of Proposition 215; the agency is interested in
preventing any access to medical marijuana.
"We have a business license [and] a million dollar insurance
policy," Hudson said. He maintained that the club
operates with the full knowledge of local law enforcement and
cooperates with health officials. "[We are] trying to
run a medical marijuana operation that was beyond reproach.
This [is] a very bad case for [the DEA.]"
Since voters approved Proposition 215 last November, an estimated
15 clubs have emerged in California offering marijuana to
patients who possess a doctor's recommendation. In January,
a Superior Court judge ruled that cannabis buyers' clubs were
legal under state law as long as they operated as non-profit
entities. Flower Therapy co-owner Beth Moore said that the
club has approximately 1,000 members.
San Francisco District Attorney Terence Hallinan criticized the
raid at a press conference on Tuesday. "It shouldn't
have happened," he said. "Federal law usually
only kicks in at very large levels. [The government's
action] is really befuddling." Hallinan is a proponent
of Proposition 215 and has verbally defended the rights of
cannabis buyers' clubs in the past. He told reporters that
he had no advance notice about Monday's raid and urged
prosecutors not to file charges in the case. He called the
DEA action "cavalier" and said that federal agents were
"wading into a very murky thicket" if they planned to
enforce local marijuana laws through federal courts.
California NORML coordinator Dale Gieringer denounced the raid as
"federal piracy." Flower Therapy is an
"honest, well-run medical marijuana club," Gieringer
said. "John Hudson made no secret of the fact that he
was growing marijuana to help supply patients with good-quality
medicine at affordable prices. By shutting down Flower
Therapy's cultivation operation, the federal government is
forcing patients to be dependent on the black market's high
prices and less scrupulous foreign smugglers. The
administration's policy is morally and constitutionally bankrupt,
and is a direct affront to the people of California who voted for
Prop. 215."
District of Columbia attorney Rufus King, Esq. of the law firm
Berliner, Corcoran & Rowe said that the government's latest
action emphasizes the importance of a federal lawsuit filed in
Washington, D.C. on March 6 challenging the federal government's
refusal to allow physicians to prescribe marijuana in states that
permit them to do so. Plaintiffs in that case -- a group of
physicians, health organizations, and patients -- seek a
declaratory judgment that the federal policy prohibiting
physicians from prescribing or recommending marijuana in
accordance with state law violates the First, Ninth, and Tenth
Amendments, and the Commerce Clause of the United States
Constitution.
For more information, please contact John Hudson of Flower
Therapy @ (415) 255-6305. For more information on
California's medical marijuana laws, please contact either Dale
Gieringer of California NORML @ (415) 563-5858 or Dave Fratello
of Americans for Medical Rights @ (310) 394-2952.
(Meanwhile) San Jose City Council Opts To Regulate Medical Marijuana Clubs
April 24, 1997, San Jose, CA: San Jose
became the first city in the United States to regulate cannabis
buyers' clubs when the City Council unanimously approved a
medical marijuana zoning ordinance earlier this month.
The ordinance allows "medical marijuana dispensaries"
to open for business in the city's commercial districts as long
as they are located 150 feet from residences. The buffer
zones between the clubs and schools, day care centers, and
churches is 500 feet. Marijuana cultivation is allowed
under the ordinance as long as the operators obtain a special
permit from the city.
The ordinance bans smoking inside the clubs and forbids people
under 18 years of age from entering the premises. Marijuana
sales are legal only to registered patients and their designated
caregivers. The ordinance does not allow clubs to deliver
medical marijuana to the residences of seriously ill patients.
Peter Baez, co-founder of the Santa Clara County Medical Club,
told reporters that he supports the ordinance despite it's
prohibition on marijuana smoking and delivery. Co-founder
Jessie Garcia said he hopes the city will revisit those issues at
a later date.
Mayor Susan Hammer summarized the council's decision. "We
certainly understand the mandate of the people of
California," she said. "We are going to regulate
the land use for this activity just like we regulate the land use
for other activities [like] bars, restaurants, and gas
stations."
NORML Foundation Executive Director Allen St.
Pierre praised the city's position. "Whereas the
federal government's official response to the passage of
Proposition 215 has been to launch a war against doctors and
seriously ill patients, the San Jose City Council is opting to
work with patients and caregivers to implement the will of the
California voters."
For more information, please contact Dale Gieringer of
California NORML @ (415) 563-5858.
American Incarceration Rates Still Highest In World... And Rising
April 24, 1997, Washington, D.C.: The
number of Americans behind bars has more than doubled since 1985
and now stands at over 1.6 million, according to the latest
report from the U.S. Department of Justice.
"America is the world leader in incarceration -- both by
number and percentage of population -- and these latest figures
indicate that this trend is continuing unabated," said NORML
Executive Director R. Keith Stroup. "Much of this
increase is a direct result of the 'War on Drugs.'"
Prisoners in the custody of the 50 states, the District of
Columbia, and the federal government account for two-thirds of
the incarcerated population. The other third are held in
local jails. California houses the highest number of
inmates while Texas has the highest rate of prison incarceration
among its state population. The report concludes that,
"One in every 163 U.S. residents [is] incarcerated."
"Stiffening penalties against non-violent drug users has led
to an explosion in American prison growth," summarized
Stroup. "Drug offenders now make up nearly two-thirds
of all federal prisoners and more than one-quarter of all state
and local inmates."
For a copy of the DOJ report: Prison and
Jail Inmates at Midyear 1996, please contact
the National Criminal Justice Reference Service @ (800)
851-3420. For more information, please contact Allen St.
Pierre of The NORML Foundation
@ (202) 483-8751.
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