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. . . a weekly service for the media on news items related to marijuana
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November 20, 1997
Key West Cannabis Buyers' Club Founder To Appear
In Court
Will Present First Ever "Medical Necessity Distribution Defense"
November 20, 1997, Key West, FL:
The founder of a Key West club that distributed medical marijuana to seriously ill
patients who possessed a physician's recommendation will appear in court on December 8 to
face felony marijuana charges.
Zvi Baranoff, who ran the approximately 60
member club until August 1996, remains hopeful that a jury will acquit the charges against
him. Legal analysts speculate that the verdict may have national significance.
Baranoff says he will raise a "defense of
medical necessity" against the marijuana distribution charges. Last September,
Judge Richard Payne ruled that Baranoff could legally raise the unique defense.
"The rational for the marijuana medical
necessity distribution defense is this: If a person has a medical necessity for marijuana,
then he has a right to use it and a right to buy it -- and therefore, there should be a
right for someone to coordinate access," Baranoff explained. He noted that his
attorney, NORML Legal Committee Member Norm Kent, won a 1988 legal
victory which affirmed a glaucoma patient's right to use marijuana as a medicine.
The Key West club, known locally as the Medical
Cannabis Advocates of Key West (MCA), operated publicly for 14 months before being raided
by law enforcement on August 14, 1996. Both Baranoff and club member Jamie Levario
were charged with second-degree felony possession and distribution of marijuana. In
a February 19 court ruling, Judge Payne dismissed charges against both men contingent upon
Baranoff's participation in a Pre-Trial Intervention Program. When Department of
Corrections officials refused to allow Baranoff to complete the program, prosecutors
revived the charges against him. No charges were reinstituted against Levario.
"If I'm guilty, let them put me in
jail," Baranoff told reporters in March. "If I'm not, and I believe that
I'm not, let's get this thing over with."
For more information, please contact either
the Medical Cannabis Advocates @ (305) 293-0190 or Attorney Norm Kent @ (954) 763-1900.
California County Okays Going Ahead With Plan To Distribute
Medical Marijuana In
Government-Run Facilities
November 20, 1997, San Mateo, CA:
San Mateo County supervisors unanimously agreed Tuesday to propose regulations to
distribute medical marijuana through government-run facilities.
The proposal, first raised by Supervisor Mike
Nevin, enjoys the apparent backing of Attorney General Dan Lungren who called the approach
"enlightened" and assigned a staff attorney to work on the proposal. Nevin
said that the establishment of a public medical marijuana dispensary would most likely
require special state legislation, and approached Sen. John Vasconcellos (D-Santa Clara)
about introducing such language in the 1998 Legislature. Nevin stated that he
expects the proposal to be ready by early next year.
"I'm trying to find a compassionate way of
getting this drug, that is now legal [in California], to the sick and dying people who
need it," Nevin explained.
Local sheriff Don Horsely said he
wholeheartedly supported the idea of county-run dispensaries. "I believe that
[this] is the most humane approach that I can think of to help the terminally ill, and
people with AIDS and glaucoma," he said.
Supervisors also agreed to develop guidelines
for issuing identity cards to qualified patients, and extended a county-wide ban on
cannabis buyers' clubs. Dr. Dennis Augustine, who heads the a buyers club in nearby
Santa Clara, criticized the embargo on private clubs and called efforts to establish
county-run dispensaries unnecessary.
"Why not provide our center as a
pilot project?" he suggested to county officials. "We're doing an
excellent job [distributing medical marijuana to those who need it] already."
The notion of distributing medical marijuana
through government-run facilities is not entirely new nor unique to California.
During the late 1970s and early 1980s, many states -- including California --
established pilot programs where federally grown marijuana was distributed to
state-approved patients. Recent attempts in Massachusetts and Washington state to
revive these programs have been delayed indefinitely while awaiting federal cooperation.
San Mateo supervisors suggested distributing
marijuana that had been previously confiscated by law enforcement rather than relying on
government grown strains.
For more information, please contact either
Dale Gieringer of California NORML @ (415) 563-5858 or Allen St Pierre of The
NORML Foundation @ (202) 483-8751. A report outlining the history of
state-run medical marijuana research programs is available from The NORML
Foundation upon request.
Ohio Supreme Court Strikes Down Auto Search Despite Driver's Consent
November 20, 1997, Columbus, OH:
The Ohio Supreme Court recently reaffirmed limits on the admissibility of evidence
seized during common vehicular searches. In a November 12 ruling, the Court found
that consent cannot be presumed voluntary merely because it is given without overt
coercion.
Writing for the Court, Justice Evelyn Lundberg
Stratton stated that voluntariness must be determined under the totality of circumstances
surrounding the incident and must be decided on a case by case basis. Stratton cited
the U.S. Supreme Court decision in Florida v. Royer which determined that
"[T]he State has the burden of proving that the necessary consent was obtained and
that it was freely and voluntarily given, a burden that is not satisfied by showing a mere
submission to a claim of lawful authority."
Defendant Robert D. Robinette was cited for
speeding in 1995 and given a verbal warning. Officer Roger Newsome then asked
Robinette if he had contraband. When Robinette replied, "No," the officer
requested permission to search Robinette's car. Robinette testified that he did not
feel he could refuse the officer's request, so he agreed to the search. The officer
found a small amount of marijuana and one methamphetamine pill and Robinette was
subsequently charged with a drug offense.
The Ohio high court declared that any
reasonable person in Robinette's position would have felt compelled to submit to the
police officer's request. Hence, Robinette's consent grew out of implied coercion
and was not truly voluntary. The court held that pursuant to the totality of
circumstances, Robinette did not voluntarily consent to the search and evidence collected
in that search cannot be used against him.
The court noted that the government can bolster
its proof of consent by demonstrating that police officers clearly and unambiguously tell
drivers when they are free to go and that they do not have to consent to a search.
However, the Court stopped short of requiring police to make such statements.
Even if an officer makes such a statement, the totality of circumstances must still
be evaluated to determine that consent is voluntary.
Justice Lundberg Stratton concluded her opinion
by acknowledging that the Ohio Supreme Court is "very mindful that police officers
face the enormous and difficult task of fighting crime.... But allowing police
officers to do their jobs must be balanced against an individual's right to be free from
unreasonable searches. At some point, individual rights must prevail. This is
just such a case.
The case is cited as Ohio v. Robinette.
For more information, please contact
Attorney Tanya Kangas of The NORML Foundation @ (202) 483-8751.
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