cannabisnews.com: Pot Club May Get Official Status










  Pot Club May Get Official Status

Posted by CN Staff on December 10, 2002 at 07:59:08 PT
By Dan White, Sentinel Staff Writer 
Source: Santa Cruz Sentinel  

In the latest local gesture of defiance to the federal government, three City Council members have requested the city deputize the founders of a local medical marijuana club.Mayor Emily Reilly, and councilmen Mike Rotkin and Tim Fitzmaurice want the council to make the club’s co-founders, Michael and Valerie Corral, "duly authorized officers" of the city of Santa Cruz — entitled by the city to hand out medical pot to the collective’s 200-plus members. 
The "deputization" plan is intended to beef up the Wo/Men’s Alliance for Medical Marijuana’s legal defense against federal prosecution. The resolution, first proposed by the co-founders of WAMM, is on the agenda of today’s 3 p.m. City Council meeting.In the past, the council, which already has strong ties to WAMM, has done everything short of deputizing the club. Council members have passed resolutions on the group’s behalf, and even showed up to a medical marijuana give- away on the steps of City Hall in September attended by 1,000 people.The September rally was in response to a federal raid earlier that month on the group’s Davenport-area pot garden. Armed federal agents uprooted 167 marijuana plants.The Corrals were arrested during the raid, and efforts to get the seized plants back have been unsuccessful. WAMM, however, is still thriving, according to the Corrals, who said they are preparing to file an injunction to prevent future raids.The majority of WAMM members are seriously or terminally ill, the Corrals said. The Corrals’ attorney, Ben Rice, said "deputy" status would put WAMM under the provisions of a federal law stating a person can’t be sued for having a controlled substance if he or she is carrying it while "enforcing" local drug laws.That federal law is the reason local police officers can legally carry drugs while engaging in a narcotics sting. According to this reading of the law, the Corrals would be "enforcing" state and local laws that allow for medical marijuana use.But a spokesman for the federal Drug Enforcement Administration said Monday that deputizing the group won’t change WAMM’s status in the eyes of the U.S. government. "They can do whatever they want, but deputizing them doesn’t make any difference as far as we’re concerned, not unless Congress changes the classification for marijuana and controlled substances," said Richard Meyer of the DEA’s San Francisco office.He added that clubs should not delude themselves into thinking such acts can prevent federal raids on medical marijuana gardens. "Anybody that is growing marijuana, distributing marijuana, shouldn’t be surprised if we paid them a visit." He also said the DEA is "concerned about the citizens of Santa Cruz. We want to let them know we will do all we can to protect them from drug trafficking."Rice said the federal provision usually relates to police, but Santa Cruz would be the third city in the state — after San Francisco and Oakland — to try to use that provision for medical marijuana users. But he said the deputization status has never been "put to the test" in federal courts. Rice said he didn’t expect deputization to stop federal raids on medical pot clubs. But he said such a city-sanctioned status could at least give people like Mike and Valerie Corral a defense to be used in court. "If Mike and Val were arrested for doing what I think is fabulous work for the community, we could say, ‘Look, the city of Santa Cruz deputized these guys and therefore they have immunity. It would be up to a federal judge to decide’ ’’After the DEA raid, the WAMM case was referred to the U.S. Department of Justice. Spokesman Charles Miller chuckled when he heard about the deputization plan."I have no idea how that would impact anything," he said. "I couldn’t even comment." The city of Santa Cruz, along with the state of California, has "compassionate" medical marijuana legislation that makes card-holding users exempt from prosecution. But users of medical pot enjoy no such protections from the federal government — a factor that contributed to the outcry over the raid on WAMM, who accused the DEA of treading roughly on local and state jurisdiction. Mike and Valerie Corral said in a letter last month to then-mayor Christopher Krohn that being deputized would "allow our function as medical marijuana providers as duly authorized officers of the city of Santa Cruz." "It’s really hard to tell what the federal government will do, and it’s hard to know if anything will stop from these ill-intended actions but I do believe this will allow us more protection as far as (legal) defense," Valerie Corral said. "But I’m very hopeful."Police Chief Steve Belcher would not comment on the deputization idea."This is the first I’ve heard of it," he said. Also on tonight’s agenda:The council, during its 7 p.m. session, will discuss whether street musicians should be exempt from a set of downtown behavior rules. The rules, approved in July, already increase space limitations on panhandlers. A majority of the council’s Downtown Commission suggested the exemption. Supporters say musicians cause very few problems and deserve a shot at self-determination.City Manager Dick Wilson and two commissioners have expressed concern that an exemption, combined with a reliance on voluntary guidelines, would give merchants and police much less say when responding to conflicts.Note: Council to consider ‘official’ status for raided medical pot club.Source: Santa Cruz Sentinel (CA)Author: Dan White, Sentinel Staff WriterPublished: December 10, 2002Copyright: 2002 Santa Cruz SentinelContact: editorial santa-cruz.comWebsite: http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/Related Articles & Web Sites:WAMMhttp://www.wamm.org/Pictures from WAMM Protesthttp://freedomtoexhale.com/eventpics.htmJudge: No Medical Pot Return http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread14913.shtmlMarijuana Farmer Wants His Crop Backhttp://cannabisnews.com/news/thread14661.shtmlMenace or Medicine? - Santa Cruz Sentinel http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread14648.shtml

Home    Comment    Email    Register    Recent Comments    Help





Comment #6 posted by druid on December 10, 2002 at 09:22:53 PT:
oops
hehehe
[ Post Comment ]


Comment #5 posted by FoM on December 10, 2002 at 09:22:13 PT
Nasarius 
That's ok. I have to check to make sure I'm not missing good articles because my memory fails me. One of the hazards of getting older I'll blame it on.Druid, thank you!
[ Post Comment ]


Comment #4 posted by druid on December 10, 2002 at 09:19:16 PT:
Nasarius
You will find that article/book review on Cannabis News here:Drugs, Guns and Money: Busted, a New Anthologyhttp://www.cannabisnews.com/news/14/thread14915.shtml
[ Post Comment ]


Comment #3 posted by Nasarius on December 10, 2002 at 09:17:03 PT
Oops
Sorry, didn't see you already posted that story :-)
[ Post Comment ]


Comment #2 posted by Nasarius on December 10, 2002 at 09:14:05 PT
Hi FoM
Interesting article/book review:http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=14723
[ Post Comment ]


Comment #1 posted by p4me on December 10, 2002 at 08:21:47 PT
Let me translate this 4 U
"They can do whatever they want, but deputizing them doesn’t make any difference as far as we’re concerned, not unless Congress changes the classification for marijuana and controlled substances," said Richard Meyer of the DEA’s San Francisco office.This translates to- "Until Congress abandons the false and malicious position thatcannabis is a schedule 1 substance, we must continue these senseless acts that make us look like fools before the world and the American people that have escaped our brainwashing effort. And I am not an idiot. If all you had to do was say that marijuana is a schedule one narcotic to draw a $2000 a week check, wouldn't you? I wonder if I would get a raise if I could say it in Spanish?"1 
[ Post Comment ]




  Post Comment