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Feds vs. S.F. on pot
Publication date: 02/13/2002
By Dan Evans and Nina Wu of The Examiner Staff
Source: San Francisco Examiner
The event was loaded -- with politics.
The Drug Enforcement Agency raided at least two Bay Area medical
marijuana clubs Tuesday morning -- one of them operating a mere three blocks
from where DEA chief Asa Hutchinson spoke Tueday night.
All told, agents seized about 8,300 plants, including seedling plants
known as clones, DEA spokesman Richard Myer said. A .22 handgun and a shotgun
belonging to one of those arrested also were confiscated.
DEA agents arrested three men in two cases. A fourth man, Kenneth Hayes,
a former executive director of the San Francisco pot club CHAMP, is in
custody in Vancouver, B.C. His attorney, Bill Panzer, said Hayes has
petitioned the Canadian government for political refugee status.
Panzer, an Oakland lawyer who co-wrote California's medical marijuana
initiative, had the more amusing take on the day's events. Since the feds are
pushing the message that buying drugs aids terrorists, he said, it seemed
strange they would crack down on people who are cultivating marijuana for the
state's sick people -- a perfectly legal enterprise under Proposition 215.
Voters approved the initiative legalizing medical marijuana in 1996, but
the U.S. Supreme Court ruled several months ago that its use was a federal
crime. Local marijuana dispensers swore at the time that they would continue
to remain open until federal officials shut them down.
"Now, since they can't buy it from people producing in state, sick people
have to buy it from drug dealers, who are aiding the terrorists," Panzer
said. "I feel it's a shame that this administration is helping to aid
terrorists."
Hutchinson denied the busts had anything to do with his first official
visit to San Francisco. He said the sweep was not aimed at medical marijuana
clubs, but at a trafficking ring originating in Canada.
He also denied the federal agency was stepping up enforcement of smaller
marijuana operations in the wake of recent pronouncements by District
Attorney Terence Hallinan and state Attorney General Bill Lockyer pushing for
a hands-off approach to medical marijuana clubs.
"Our priorities have always been the larger traffickers," Hutchinson
said.
Tell that to Hallinan
The district attorney -- a vocal proponent of medical marijuana --
decried the action in a speech outside the Commonwealth Club offices on
Market Street. Speaking in front of the building where Hutchinson spoke an
hour later, The City's top prosecutor complained that neither his office nor
the Police Department had been informed of the action.
"Matters of health and safety are for the local government and not some
federal, national agency," he said, as Board of Supervisors President Tom
Ammiano got the 150 or so protesters gathered to chant "b---sh--, b---sh--."
"It's a decision to be made by the voters of California," Hallinan
continued. "I call on the DEA to respect the wishes of the people of
California and stay out of the marijuana clubs of San Francisco."
Hallinan and Ammiano were joined by Supervisors Mark Leno, Chris Daly and
Matt Gonzalez, all who voted in November to make San Francisco a marijuana
sanctuary. The feds, however, felt differently.
Dynamiting the door
Earlier Tuesday, DEA officials dynamited the front door to the Harm
Reduction Center at 52 Sixth St., cordoned off the sidewalk and cleared it of
its supply of buds. The proprietor of the club, Richard "Brick" Watts, was
hauled away.
Agents served eight search warrants in San Francisco, Oakland and
Petaluma.
In Oakland, a similar scene erupted at 6:30 a.m. at the home of Ed
Rosenthal, who is connected with the Oakland Cannabis Buyers Collective.
Rosenthal's home was searched, and numerous papers were seized, said his
wife, Jane Kline.
"He does horticultural things, and I'm begging the agents to take some of
the old junk away, but I guess they're not going to," she said, noting there
were no illegal substances in the home. "I don't mean to be flip, but I'm
angry. They should be spending their time worrying about terrorists, not sick
people."
Rosenthal wrote a book on marijuana cultivation and wrote an advice
column on the topic for the magazine "High Times" for several years.
Watts, Rosenthal and Hayes are listed as co-defendants in the criminal
complaint.
Hallinan testified on Hayes' behalf during his trial on charges of
marijuana cultivation and sales in Sonoma County last March. Hayes and
Michael Foley, a former general manager of the club, were acquitted in large
part because Hallinan claimed Prop. 215 protected the two men.
Feds target cultivators
James Halloran, another Oakland resident, was arrested in a separate case
Tuesday. Halloran is suspected of growing more than 1,000 plants in an
abandoned movie theater. All four men are charged with cultivation of
marijuana.
Jeff Jones, executive director of the Oakland cooperative, said the busts
were anything but a coincidence. It is a waste of time and taxpayer money, he
said, to arrest people for actions that voters in California decided were not
a crime.
"The nerve of them coming into our state and violating our constitution,"
Jones said. "It's lacking in compassion and lacking in our locally supported
efforts."
Anger in The City
This was the feeling in San Francisco, where a cluster of bystanders --
many of them members of the cannabis club -- watched in anger as the feds did
their work.
"This is San Francisco," said Mark Romero of CHAMP, who ran to the scene
after hearing of the sweep. He stood with his arms crossed and repeatedly
tore up the yellow tape surrounding the scene, much to the ire of the DEA
officers. "It's a public sidewalk. Get out of my house," he yelled.
"If they want to, why don't they go after the drugs over there?" he said,
pointing across the street.
"DEA, Go away!" yelled Clark Sullivan from the League of American
Marijuana Patients & Supporters. He continued to ride around on his bike,
yelling "Boo! Go back to your federal land, idiot. We don't want you here.
Leave us alone and go after the terrorists."
Lucifer T. Cheshire, a 6-foot-tall man clad in a leather jacket who said
he smokes marijuana because he has AIDS, also joined in. "We're here to make
sure they know how we feel," he said. "Pot is one of the few things that kept
me alive."
Another man, Patrick Hughes circled around the police squad units -- sent
as backup -- intermittently standing up and raising his arms in the air. "I
have brain damage," he said. "I can stand up, but I can't walk."
Hughes said he smokes marijuana morning, noon and night to ease the pain.
"This sucks. I just got my card yesterday," said John Stone, a
neighborhood resident who has AIDS. "I kind of understand why they're doing
this because people abuse it, but then there are people like me."
Stone estimated that about 50 percent of those with cards probably abused
the system. "If it's going to happen here, it's going to happen all over The
City."
James Railback, another member of the center, said he was drinking at a
nearby bar when he heard the dynamite go off. When he went out to see what it
was, he discovered the sweep. "They took my weed and they took my pipe," he
said. "F------- DEA. It's the state against the feds."
At the Market Street Cannabis Club, reaction to the raids was nonchalant.
Jim Green, who runs the club, said he does his business as honestly and
above-the-board as possible. There are risks, he said, but everyone knows
that -- or at least should -- going in.
"When you're engaged in civil disobedience, you can't expect soft or fair
treatment," Green said. "It's not easy to deal with, but I've been so
concerned about the inevitability of this for so long I'm almost numb."
E-mail Dan Evans
E-mail Nina Wu
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Distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in
receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.
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