Grow Houses going “up in smoke”

09 Sep 2010, written by admin 0 Comments
Grow Houses going “up in smoke”

The recent fires in Boulder are wreaking havok on a chunk of Boulder’s Medical Marijuana supply

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Cannabis Connoisseur #3

22 Aug 2010, written by admin 3 Comments Continue reading

Grow issue #9 is out!

22 Aug 2010, written by admin 5 Comments Continue reading

Medical marijuana lawsuit against Westminster could challenge all local dispensary bans

15 Aug 2010, written by admin 0 Comments

HB 1284, the medical marijuana regulation law signed by Governor Bill Ritter, includes the right for municipalities to ban dispensaries, and numerous cities, including Aurora andBroomfield, are taking advantage of it. But while MMJ attorneys have talked about issuing lawsuits to challenge this and other HB 1284 provisions, none have appeared — until now. And the just-filed complaint involving Westminster’s Herbal Remedies could be a game-changer.

Among the attorneys handling the case is Sean McAllister, who led the successful campaign to decriminalize marijuana in Breckenridge last November. He makes it clear that while the case focuses on the City of Westminster, he thinks it’ll have statewide repercussions.

“This is the test case,” he says, “and we as the plaintiffs and the attorneys are going to bear the obligation for the entire movement to get a good result here.”

sean mcallister photo.jpg
Sean McAllister.

McAllister supplies background about the case.

“In November of 2009, before the legislature even enacted HB 1284, Westminster passed a dispensary ban,” he says. “And they did this even though there were two dispensaries open and operating in the community. They had come out and permitted these dispensaries, allowed them to operate, and then basically changed their mind.”

Herbal Remedies, owned by Carl Wemhoff, was one of the dispensaries in question — and McAllister charges the city with “walking a fine ethical line” in attempting to shut it down “by threatening, intimidating and coercing the landlord,” Gene Lehman, age 84.

“They’ve told him, ‘We’re going to prosecute you criminally’ — and, in fact, they did file criminal charges against him, and Carl, too. But then they said, ‘If you kick this tenant out, we’ll drop the charges against you.’ And never as a lawyer are you supposed to use the threat of criminal prosecution to resolve a civil dispute.”

According to McAllister, Lehman began eviction proceedings against the dispensary in June, despite the fact that “he doesn’t want to evict his tenants. He loves Herbal Remedies, and he loves Carl.”

The result was an eviction hearing on Monday, August 9. There, McAllister says, “we told the judge that this eviction proceeding was a sham, because the city isn’t here, and they’re trying to have the landlord do their dirty work. They’re acting like the puppet master, trying to force him to evict a tenant he doesn’t want to evict. And the judge totally agreed with us. He said, ‘This is crazy,’ because the real fight is over whether Westminster’s ordinance is legal. So we filed a lawsuit to bring the real issue to a head instead of this sideshow of an ethically questionable eviction process.”

The grounds for the Herbal Remedies lawsuit are much the same as those argued in Centennial late last year in a lawsuit on behalf of the CannaMart dispensary. CannaMart had a valid business license, but Centennial moved to shut it down anyhow, precipitating legal proceedings in Arapahoe County District Court. There, Judge Christopher Cross ruled that Centennial’s reliance upon weed’s illegality under federal law was trumped by the Colorado constitutional amendment legalizing medical marijuana.

This ruling fits with McAllister’s interpretation of the law.

“The constitution allows for distribution or sale,” says McAllister, “and any ban by the local government or the legislature will violate the constitution. And if this court in Adams County finds the same way the Centennial court did — that the constitution allows sale and distribution — these bans will be overturned.

“It wouldn’t be technically binding,” he concedes. “If we win this case, it wouldn’t be binding until we would have a Court of Appeals or Colorado Supreme Court decision. Those are the levels of decisions that would be binding on the entire state. But I think a victory in Adams County would be a strong signal to the legislature that these bans are illegal. And it would let localities that have bans see that the writing’s on the wall.”

On the surface, the setting for this fight is problematic for McAllister and his cause.

“Since 2000, when the medical marijuana amendment passed, and especially since last year, when the dispensary movement really exploded, the Adams County Sheriff’s Office and the Adams County District Attorney’s Office has been unfavorable to the law,” he maintains. “They’ve taken every opportunity to challenge medical marijuana participants as to their legality, even though voters in Adams County voted in favor of the amendment with 52 percent in favor. That’s why, in my opinion, the city, the DA’s office and the sheriff’s office are all engaging in undermining the constitution against the will of the voters.”

Why choose this course if constituents feel differently? “My belief is, they get a few vocal complaints and assume that because they don’t hear positive things from the other side, the community must all be against it. But I think the dynamics of this issue are so different. They’re enacting these hardcore bans to answer the loudest voices instead of being responsible. And I believe Westminster’s ban is irresponsible. It puts patients in a bad position. Why should a patient in Westminster have to drive to Denver to get something the constitution says they’re allowed to have?”

The progress of the Herbal Remedies suit probably won’t be swift.

“We’ll be asking for a preliminary injunction, and our hope is that there would be a hearing in the next thirty days,” McAllister says, adding that the case involving landlord Lehman is on hold until October at least. “We hope to get a preliminary-injunction ruling striking down the municipal statute. At that point, Westminster could revoke its ban and instead engage in responsible, reasonable regulation — and that’s our preferred way of working this out. But we could also go to trial whether we win or lose the preliminary injunction, and that could drag out another six months or a year beyond the preliminary injunction phase.”

In the meantime, Westminster has denied the renewal of Herbal Remedies owner Wemhoff’s business license — a decision that strikes McAllister as patently absurd.

“Herbal Remedies has put over $100,000 this year alone directly into the city coffers from sales tax revenue,” he notes. “And they employ over twenty people, with full benefits. In a recession, why wouldn’t the city want a business that’s producing enough tax revenue to probably pay for two city employees, and that’s serving thousands of patients, to continue operating?”

After all, he goes on, “there have been no complaints of criminal activity associated with the dispensary, and no complaints from neighbors, either. All we’ve heard over the last year is how dispensaries are horrible magnets for crime and disorder, but the doomsayers have been completely proven wrong. The sense I have is, these places have been remarkably crime-free and peaceful, and they fit in just fine with other businesses. And yet Westminster is acting like a federal agent and enforcing federal law instead of obeying Colorado law.

“Access to medical marijuana is a patient’s right, not a local government’s choice.”

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Daniel Hinton, Suspect In Medical Marijuana Murder, Pleads Not Guilty, Second Suspect Still On the Loose

15 Aug 2010, written by admin 0 Comments

LOS ANGELES (CBS/AP) Daniel Deshawn Hinton, one of two men who police say killed a worker at a Los Angeles medical marijuana dispensary in late June, pleaded not guilty to murder Monday.

Police are still searching for 27-year-old Raymond Lemone Easter, a suspected gang member who allegedly robbed the Higher Patch Holistic Care dispensary in Echo Park with Hinton on June 24.

Authorities say after ransacking the business, confiscating money and marijuana, the robbers shot and killed store worker Matthew Butcher, 27, and wounded a security guard who is currently recovering from his injuries.

Hinton was arrested July 21 and pleaded not guilty to the robbery charges as well as additional charges of attempted murder, along with the special circumstance allegation of murder during a robbery.

Last week the City Council offered a $50,000 reward for information leading to Easter’s arrest.

Lt. Gregg Strenk, who is managing the investigation, said authorities are trying gather information about the third suspect who is believed to have been with Easter and Hinton when the shooting occurred, and a fourth person believed to be the getaway driver, according to the Los Angeles Times.

Hours after the Higher Patch shooting, another fatal shooting occurred at a medical marijuana dispensary in Hollywood. Authorities say an employee of the Hollywood Holistic store was found dead at the scene and that the business had apparently been robbed, according to CBS affiliate KCBS.

Police are not saying if the two shootings are related.

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Black market drug connections in Northern California

04 Aug 2010, written by admin 3 Comments

A Missoula man whose black market drug connections in Northern California allegedly furnished local medical marijuana dispensaries with pot pleaded guilty this week to a federal offense.

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31 Jul 2010, written by admin 0 Comments

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Oakland: A Model to Follow

28 Jul 2010, written by admin 0 Comments
Oakland is the most medical marijuana friendly city in California. For some time the cops and collectives have been at a respectful impasse; Oakland is the only Sanctuary City in California, i.e., there is some form of minimal support provided by the city which allows the collectives to operate without fear of prosecution nor the same odd sanctions and irregular law-enforcement practices that go on further south. Also in the news, in recent weeks it was decided that Oakland’s medical marijuana dispensary owners would pay an extra tax to operate within the sanctuary city. As opposed to the 9.25% they’d been paying, it was bumped up to 10.25%, which, though only one percent, when added up, amounts to many extra tax dollars that can be put back into the treasury.Regarding this new tax, a supposition could be made that the owners were probably furious, up-in-arms about the raise, however, the reaction from the aforementioned was just the opposite: they were fine with it, happy to pay a little higher tax. Indeed, the tax-raise was unanimously backed by the owners, and why: because they’ll happily pay their taxes — even higher taxes — if the city council who represents their better interests legitimately support them.I mention Oakland because it can be seen as the paradigm of what could be, if lawmakers, police, lawyers and city-councilmen in Los Angeles would follow the city’s lead. Los Angeles could be a sanctuary city; owners here would happily pay more taxes if it yielded the same results it does in Oakland: protection.Question: why is the Los Angeles city council refusing to follow the same standards: taxation for representation, the basis of our economic model. I have no doubt LA collective owners would be ecstatic to pay a considerably higher tax if it yielded the same results as up North. The tax base in LA is massive, much larger than Oakland. If applied, the revenues generated could have a tremendously positive stimulus effect on the the state’s broken budget.
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Hope?

28 Jul 2010, written by admin 0 Comments
“New American policy.” “An end to the raids.” “A stop to the war on medical cannabis.” All these phrases, in the months since president Obama was elected, have proven to be nothing more than political rhetoric.  To date, there has been no enforcement of any new American Policy–indeed, nothing has changed … nothing at all.  To date, there has been no stop, nor indication, that an end to the raids is near: since he was elected there have been at least six raids.  As for the war on illegal prosecution of innocent shop owner and patients? — Recently, crystal clean Morro Bay collective owner Robert Lynch has scene no clemency in court, and appears to be facing five years; Eddy Lepp is being sentenced on May 18th with predictably similar results.   This shift towards non-clemency (the opposite of Obama and AG statements) is now being enforced as official policy in California courts– and why the negative sentencing results, you might ask?  Because when a California judge presiding over a Pre-Obama court case asked for a response from the Federal Government as to “how they should proceed with sentencing,” (taking into consideration the Attorney General’s ambiguous policy statements) the Department of Justice head, H. Marshall Jarrett, immediately fired back a memo (See Above) which effectively sealed the fates of owners and patients in California court.For a brief summation on how the President and his administration has failed the medical cannabis community thus far, let me provide you with a timeline of all the events. To begin, the raids have not stopped, as recent as May 6th and illegal raid was conducted on a club in Pomona, California, resulting in the shutting down of the club, imprisonment and charges being faced by three of the club’s volunteers.  This latest raid is just one, of six, which have taken place since Obama took office (ironically, a raid took place on November 4th, the day of his swearing in).  The Pomona incident was the paradigm of local sheriff and DEA breaking the law, and doing flagrantly so– walking around with their hats backwards, chest puffed out while threatening legal patients with comments like: “Prop 215: We don’t believe in that,” or “Fuck it, I’m old school,” or my favorite to date: “your on our turf.”  These comments are not exaggerated, and they do not represented a street dialogue between two battling gangs, but are the common verbal intimidation tactics employed by DEA agents in California as they continue the raiding.Furthermore, the President and the AG’s declaration to not prosecute legal patients or clinics, citing over and over: “It would not be a good use of the justice department’s resources at this time,” has become a hollowed out phrase.  Whether it would be, or would not; whether President Obama honestly approves, or disapproves of medical marijuana, in reality, makes no difference: regardless of the language he uses, the U.S. Justice Department is still sinking millions of dollars into their futile war on medical marijuana.The bedrock truth on the issue is this: Obama and Attorney General Eric Holden do not have time for medical cannabis and their shared rhetoric, though hopeful, contradicts all legal actions taking place in California.  Positive rhetoric carefully crafted is simply not enough: Action is the only course our president can take if California patients will ever be truly emancipated. Unfortunately, his current course (status quo) will probably not shift too quickly.  When put beside other uphill battles Obama is currently facing: a devastated economy, a depleted health care structure, failing education systems, and a war in Iraq, the California-Collective-conundrum doesn’t really hold enough water to warrant his undivided attention.Nonetheless, it is a difficult pill to swallow, that was is happening in California today is no different from the conditions pro-marijuana faced under the dreaded Bush Administration.  The DEA still sporadically raids, innocent growers and legal shop owners are still going to jail, weed is still a non-topic for the elected President.   Until it is, hope…. Is a long ways away.
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