LOS ANGELES, Oct. 19, 2009
L.A. Prosecutor Vows to Target Pot Shops
City Cracks Down on Medical Marijuana Sellers as Legal Loophole Allows Clinics to Proliferate
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(CBS/iStockphoto)
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Photo Essay Celebs Busted for Marijuana Which stars have had run-ins with the law for possessing pot? Some may surprise you.
Still, he wasn't expecting the phone call one August day when a voice said the police were outside and he needed to open up or they would bust down the door. His first thought that it was a joke turned to terror when he opened the door.
Heavily armed officers in helmets, bulletproof vests and, oddly enough, Bermuda shorts stormed his store, handcuffed him, disabled security cameras and seized his drugs before taking him to jail. When he asked why his shop was invaded, an officer responded, "We're closing them all down."
Those words could prove prescient after Los Angeles County District Attorney Steve Cooley said last week he wants to shutter clinics that sell pot for profit. Cooley's plan is the latest salvo in a prolonged conflict in California over whether medical marijuana is truly having its intended effect or is being abused by the larger population.
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Until recently, raids on clinics typically led to federal prosecutions, but Cooley's remarks (and similar ones from Attorney General Jerry Brown) signal a new approach to clear the haze left by Proposition 215, the 1996 state ballot measure that allowed sick people with referrals from doctors and an identification card to smoke pot.
"Everybody is scared," said Tepel, who has spoken with other pot store operators. "Why are voters' rights being stepped all over? This kind of blind justice has to stop."
The crackdown is a crushing blow for dispensary owners who were relieved in March when U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said federal agents would only target marijuana distributors who violate both federal and state laws.
A three-page memo spelling out the policy is expected to be sent Monday to federal prosecutors in 14 states, and also to top officials at the FBI and Drug Enforcement Administration. Under federal law, marijuana is illegal.
The comments Holder made earlier this year appear to have emboldened entrepreneurs as marijuana shops cropped up across California. In Los Angeles alone, there are an estimated 800 dispensaries, more than any other city in the nation. In 2005, there were only four, authorities said.
KCBS: Medical Marijuana Clinics Popping Up All Over L.A.
Cooley contends a vast majority of several hundred outlets his office investigated aren't following state law. Initially, the law allowed authorized marijuana users to grow their own plants, but lawmakers revised the law in 2003 to allow collectives to provide pot grown by members.
Cooley said he would target stores who are profiting and selling to people who don't qualify for medicinal marijuana.
"All those who are operating illegally, our advice to them is to shut down voluntarily and they won't be subject to prosecution," Cooley told The Associated Press on Wednesday.
At the same time, advocates are gathering signatures to get as many as three pot-legalization measures on next year's ballot in California. One poll shows voters would support legalizing marijuana outright. Thirteen states, including California, allow medical marijuana.
Cooley said his office has been assessing the rush of marijuana dispensaries for the past two years and has provided training for his staff over the past several months in anticipation of filing cases.
"Holder's statement probably created the impression that there wasn't going to be any federal investigation or prosecution of these entities," Cooley said. "There has to be some clarification."
Some legal observers believe the first case Cooley files since his announcement will show how egregious the illegal behavior has become among medical marijuana outlets.
"He's going to find a dispensary that is way over the line," said Rory Little, a professor at the University of California Hastings College of Law.
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Among the candidates are Jeffrey Joseph, who runs Organica and was arrested in August but has yet to be charged. Authorities recovered 452 marijuana plants, more than 100 pounds of hashish and more than $100,000 in cash from his home and dispensaries in Marina del Rey and Culver City.
Defense attorney William Kroger said authorities fail to account for expenses and other costs dispensary owners incur and the proliferation of new rivals has hurt business.
"Most of my clients aren't making a lot of money," said Kroger, who represents about a dozen other owners. "I'd like to see Cooley sit down with us and keep shops open for those who need it and thin out the herd so there aren't so many of them."
James Shaw of the Union of Medical Marijuana Patients, an advocacy group for users, said his group plans to file a lawsuit against the city and county of Los Angeles to prohibit prosecution of legal organizations.
While the definition of a compliant dispensary is open to interpretation, Shaw said it's up to local municipalities to determine what matches up best with state law.
"Wherever there are regulations, there is less need for law enforcement intervention," Shaw said.
Nowhere is the topic more muddled than in Los Angeles, where city officials say plenty of people are getting high for the wrong reasons.
While the city has had a moratorium prohibiting new medical marijuana facilities for two years, officials have been unable to pass an ordinance governing the dispensaries. More than 180 dispensaries qualified to remain open under the moratorium, but many others took advantage of a loophole known as a "hardship exemption" that allowed them to open while awaiting city approval.
Tepel, a married father of four, agrees some pot clinics abuse the system but he maintains he had all the proper paperwork and followed the rules. If police had thoroughly investigated, they would have found most of his customers were either older or female, as opposed to younger men, and many grew their own marijuana and sold the drug to Tepel as allowed by the state.
After investing tens of thousands of dollars, Tepel argued it will take years to recoup his investment.
Tepel believes his shop in a strip mall with tinted black windows was targeted because it was on a busy street and not "in the hood or in a back alley."
"We're not tatted-up drug dealers. This is a family-run operation," said Tepel, who is scheduled to be arraigned Monday on one count of felony possession of marijuana with the intent to sell. "I don't want to do anything to jeopardize my future, my family's future. We didn't deserve this."
By Associated Press Writer Greg Risling
© MMIX The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- Pot isn't medecine...South Africa discovered the truth 6 years ago and it's time we do teh same. All you pot smokers out there--get ready for your beating.
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- How odd that the majority of the populations who advocate the legalization of pot are the users themselves.
- andie52: and the majority of those who resist alcohol prohibition are users themselves. what is the point?
- Here is the reality in South Africa. Sounds like they are having the same discussions that we are only with less organized support.
http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/354/dagga.shtml
South Africa's lead anti-drug agency, the Central Drug Authority, has released a draft paper rejecting the decriminalization of marijuana, or "dagga" as the herb is locally known, the Johannesburg Sunday Times reported. The paper will guide the country's marijuana policy as part of the National Drug Master Plan until 2009.
According to draft paper lead author, Dorothy Malaka, a social work lecturer at the University of the North, such reforms would be premature. "Although there is a case for decriminalizing cannabis, it would be a mistake at this stage," she said. "Developed countries like the Netherlands have decriminalized cannabis, but it is a new policy and the effects of it have not yet been tested," Malaka asserted -- roughly twenty years after cannabis cafes first began booming in Amsterdam.
Another Central Drug Authority member, David Bayever, a lecturer in pharmacotherapy at the University of Witwaterstrand, told the Times he opposed legalization, saying there was evidence linking crime and substance abuse. The social service system could not manage the increase in users if pot were legalized, he added.
While the draft paper nixed the idea of decriminalization, it did recommend more research on marijuana's uses as a medicine. Malaka told the Times dagga has proven therapeutic uses, citing its use in Canada and the US.
Not everyone involved in drafting the paper was opposed to decriminalization or legalization. Professor Charles Parry, director of the Medical Research Council's Alcohol and Drug Abuse Research Group, told the Times liberalizing cannabis controls would result in considerable law enforcement savings.
According to a report from the United Nations' Integrated Regional Information Networks (IRIN) issued in December, smallholder farmers in the southern African nation of Swaziland are ignoring government efforts to suppress the marijuana crop because it provides cash income and medicine. Virtually surrounded by the country of South Africa, Swaziland is afflicted by extreme poverty and an AIDS infection rate estimated at 40% for adults, according to UN figures.
'Dagga' (marijuana) isn't just a cash crop, farmers said. They admitted to IRIN to supplying marijuana to the growing number of people suffering from AIDS in the country, a move that has been abetted by AIDS support groups, who say dagga encourages the appetite of AIDS sufferers. "Particularly when you are starting with the anti-retroviral drugs, your body can feel bad and you don't want to eat anything - that is when people become thin," Eunice Simelane of Swazis for Positive Living told IRIN.
Here is another one you might be interested to check out.
http://www.southafrica.info/travel/documents/immigration.htm
You aren't beating anyone keyboard soldier.
- What a ******.
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- Its the # 1 Cash Crop in California.
Legalize It.
The state then should sell the Growing Rigths to people who want to produce it and then TAX the KRAP out of it.
What a huge waste of Resources by the L.A. Prosecutor. - Reply to this comment
- What a huge waste of resources.
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- Let's shut down all the profiteering drug dealers. Start with all the members of Big PhRMA. Just asking for a level playing field here.
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- Most likely some of the dispensaries are following the new law and some aren't (just my guess). Shutting down the merely profiteering operations will create a better climate for the legitimate operations AND the consumers in the long run (just my opinion).
As a next step, we as a nation would be wise to adopt an approach allowing individuals to grow a little marijuana for personal use. It will put the illegal drug dealers out of business in a year. Limit the size of the growing area or the number of plants, and put a small user-fee on it to cover administrative costs, something like a fishing license.
One possibility:$100 per year for a permit to cultivate a dozen plants.
It's a win-win. - Reply to this comment
- This sounds like the last Gasps of marijuana law enforcement in California.
Come-on boys!!!
Lits git-em while it's still illegal. - Reply to this comment
- I guess the dumbazz didn't get the memo from the feds saying they aren't arresting these guys anymore.
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- I guess the ******* didn't get the memo from the feds saying they aren't arresting these guys anymore.
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- The Feds have one policy that they are at odds with. The States have another and now this county prosecutor has his own opinion.
Just legalize the crap already and quit making yourselves look like a bunch of dummies. And they say pot negatively affects peoples brains. What kinds of drugs are all these politicians on? - Reply to this comment
- "We have to maintain our commitment to keep drugs & drug sales in the hands of our local criminal gangs."
District Attorney Steve Cooley - Reply to this comment
- Bush Sr. called them "Jack booted thugs", although he took a lot of heat from the squealing little oinkers for saying hit, he was spot on.
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- L.A. Prosecutor Vows to Target Pot Shops ... He must not have anything else to do.
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- HUM.A lot of resources used to bust a shop.How many gangster running gun battles did they break up this week?
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