Southern California Legal Growers

can.i.buz

Well-Known Member
I'm an ambassador for American's for Safe Access. It looks like the LAPD isn't getting the picture and we all need to stand up, take notice, and do something. Who's with me?

Posted on safeaccessnow.org on May 30, 2009:

LAPD Detective Supervisor Holcomb from the Devonshire precinct in the San Fernando Valley claimed that his department closed four Los Angeles medical cannabis dispensing collectives in recent days. Speaking with defense attorney Bill Kroger, who represents one of the collectives, Holcomb said the LA City Council's ongoing effort to regulate these facilities is irrelevant because the associations violate state law. The extent of the police activity is still unconfirmed, but if Holcomb's claims are true, this may be an early sign of an LAPD offensive against collectives in the San Fernando Valley.

Holcomb told the attorney that the collectives were illegal under People v. Mentch, a California Supreme Court case which limited the ability of cannabis growers to act as primary caregivers – but has no impact on collective and cooperative associations. The Detective also misrepresented California law when he told the attorney that selling cannabis was illegal under all circumstances. California Health and Safety Code Section 11362.775 specifically allows sales within the membership of a patients' collective or cooperative. In People v. Urziceanu, the Third District Court of Appeal issued a decision affirming the legality of patients' associations, and held that state law provides for a defense to cannabis distribution for collectives and cooperatives.

Detective Holcomb's comments are not surprising or new. A culture of resistance to medical cannabis permeates the LAPD, as it does most law enforcement agencies. Officers often grasp at straws trying to explain away Proposition 215, Senate Bill 420, and the mountain of case law upholding our state law and patients' rights. Holcomb's arguments are remarkably similar to those offered by outgoing Los Angeles City Attorney Rocky Delgadillo when he offered a draft ordinance designed to close all storefront patients' associations in Los Angeles earlier this year. The LAPD is apparently reading from the lame duck City Attorney's talking points.

Law enforcement resistance to medical cannabis can not be explained by ignorance. Last year, California Attorney General Jerry Brown published guidelines saying that "a properly organized and operated collective or cooperative that dispenses medical marijuana through a storefront may be lawful under California law," provided the facility substantially complies with the guidelines. This is not wishful thinking from medical cannabis advocates. This is direction from the state's top law enforcement official.

There may be times when local law enforcement must intervene in a patients association to protect members and the welfare of the community at large, or to police bona fide violations of state law. However, blanket judgments and untenable legal explanations are evidence continued resistance and bad faith – not effective police work. Elected officials, voters, and finally the courts, must hold this kind of enforcement in check if we are to realize the opportunity for full implementation of state law offered by the new evolving federal policy.
 

can.i.buz

Well-Known Member
This was also posted that same day:

ASA Gives Strong Argument Before Appeals Court in Collective Case

This week ASA Chief Counsel Joe Elford presented oral arguments before the Court of Appeal for the Third Appellate District in Sacramento. The case in question, Williams v. Butte County, involves a small patient collective which was harassed by the Butte County Sheriff’s Office. Williams and six other patients had pooled their labor and resources to maintain a 41-plant garden on Williams’ property. But during one of the notorious Butte County sweeps several years ago, Deputy Sheriff Jacob Hancock came to Williams’ property without a warrant and required him to tear down all but twelve of the plants upon threat of arrest. The Deputy allowed Williams to keep six plants for himself and six plants for his wife.

This illegal seizure of the collective’s medicine was based on a Butte county policy that forbids patient collectives, unless every member of the collective lives on the property or physically tills the soil. This is a restriction not found anywhere in California law, so ASA sued. And won. The trial court agreed that the Butte County policy conflicts with state law, which does not contain such restrictions on collectives. Further, the court agreed with ASA that a patient could state a claim for unreasonable search and seizure under California law in such a circumstance.

So Butte County took the matter up with the Court of Appeal, and was was later joined by the California Peace Officers’ Association, California Police Chiefs’ Association, and California Sherriffs’ Association, who seem to be filing amicus briefs against us in nearly every ASA case.

At the hearing, the Court asked a series of tough questions to Butte County. Early on, one Justice asked whether any law enforcement can seize any medical cannabis at any time, since it remains illegal under federal law. After the Butte attorney answered that that was probably so, another Justice of the three-Judge panel remarked that this might violate the spirit of Proposition 215 and asked whether the electorate wouldn't be "mystified" by a decision that would allow law enforcement to seize cannabis from patients without any restriction whatsoever. This was a very welcome start.

In the argument, Elford quoted from the California Supreme Court’s opinion in People v. Mower that "probable cause depends on all of the circumstances, including one’s status as a qualified medical marijuana patient." Which puts a restriction on the ability of law enforcement to seize medicine from qualified patients — there must be probable cause under state law. And there was none here. Furthermore, the officer acted in this case without a warrant, and without any exigent circumstance to justify a warrantless seizure — he knew that Williams wanted to keep the marijuana and was not going to destroy it on his own. He had no good excuse for failing to get a warrant.

The case is an important one, and ASA expects a ruling within 90 days.
 

can.i.buz

Well-Known Member
Tomorrow, July 15, members of the Senate Health Committee will hear testimony in favor of Senate Joint Resolution 14, which calls on Congress to cease using federal resources to interfere with California's medical marijuana laws.

SJR 14 urges Congress to stop federal raids on medical marijuana patients and providers, and to support clinical trials to better assess the drug's safety and efficacy.

If you have not yet done so, please take a moment today to contact your Senate member and ask him or her to act expeditiously in favor of SJR 14. If he or she sits on the Senate Health Committee, then it is especialy important that they hear from you. For your convenience, a pre-written letter will be e-mailed to your elected officials when you go here:

http://capwiz.com/norml2/issues/alert/?alertid=13525391

For more information about this measure, please visit: http://www.canorml.org.

Thank you for supporting NORML's marijuana law reform efforts in California.

Sincerely,
The NORML Team
 

can.i.buz

Well-Known Member
The LA-ASA Chapter is hosting a special reception for Thomas Kikuchi at our monthly chapter meeting on Saturday, July 18. Please join us at Haru Sushi Café to celebrate Tom’s recent release from federal prison after serving over three and a half years for growing medical cannabis. Tom, his partner Stephanie Landa, and actor Kevin Gage were convicted in 2005 – despite the fact that the City of San Francisco and the local police department approved the garden.

Come meet Tom and hear the latest news in the grassroots campaign to protect and expand patients’ rights. Other items on the agenda include an update on the regulatory process in Los Angeles, news about SJR 14, and other developments at the local, state, and federal level.


What: Reception for Tom Kikuchi at LA-ASA Meeting

When: 1:00 PM * Saturday, July 18, 2009

Where: Haru Sushi Café, 480 San Vicente Blvd., Los Angeles CA 90048

More Info: [email protected]


Haru Sushi Café is located on San Vicente Blvd. at Drexel – just around the corner from the Patient ID Center, where we usually meet. You can get public transit information online at http://www.mta.net/riding_metro/default.htm

Visit http://harusushicafe.com/ to learn more about the restaurant. The reception for Tom is generously sponsored by the Landa Prison Outreach Project.

Please invite your friends and loved ones. All medical cannabis supporters are welcome!

See you on Saturday, July 18!
Don Duncan
ASA California Campaign Director
Americans for Safe Access (ASA) is the largest national member-based organization of patients, medical professionals, scientists and concerned citizens promoting safe and legal access to cannabis for therapeutic use and research.
 

can.i.buz

Well-Known Member
CA Senate Committee Urges New Federal Policy
Health Committee adopts SJR 14 by a 7-3 vote

Dear ASA Supporter,

Yesterday, the California Senate Health Committee approved an ASA-sponsored resolution authored by Senator Mark Leno (D-San Francisco) calling on President Obama and the US Congress to make important changes in federal medical cannabis policy.

ASA is promoting Senate Joint Resolution (SJR) 14 because the United States is at a historic crossroads. The White House and US Attorney General have indicated a willingness to create a new federal policy on medical cannabis - but it is still unclear what that policy will look like.

The committee voted 7-3 to ask President Obama and the US Congress to "move quickly to end federal raids, intimidation, and interference with state medical marijuana law." And SJR 14 goes further by asking the government to establish "an affirmative defense to medical marijuana charges in federal court" and to facilitate advanced clinical trials.

We still have work to do to pass SJR 14 in both houses of the California Legislature. Then, we need to take it to Washington, DC, and make it part of our federal campaign. Your support and participation have helped ASA get this far. Please make a special donation to ASA today to support our ongoing work.

Thank you for your help!

Don Duncan
California Director
Americans for Safe Access

P.S. Read more about SJR 14 at www.AmericansForSafeAccess.org/SJR14

Americans for Safe Access is the nation's largest organization of patients, medical professionals, scientists and concerned citizens promoting safe and legal access to cannabis for therapeutic use and research.
Become an ASA Member!
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Americans for Safe Access
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Oakland, CA 94612
Phone: 510-251-1856
Fax: 510-251-2036

Email us!
 

can.i.buz

Well-Known Member
Its ridiculous that these fucking cops think they're opinions on mmj are even remotely relevant...
I'm going to look into LEAP. I don't know anything about them but if it's a good group they need to be supported. My daughter wants to work for the public defender's office when she passes the bar next week. She hates cops.
 

GrowTech

stays relevant.
Are you against MMJ?
Was more or less a joke, relax there bud- you know I serve dope out here. :lol: I'm also a paying contributor to ASA, CA NORML, and other organizations working on bettering lives here in California.

My best recommendations on being active in the MMJ community:

Become an ASA Ambasador
Join the ASA Twitter
Sign up for Email Alerts
Make contributions to ASA

But most importantly... Go out and do the dirty work... because actions speak louder than words! :D
 

can.i.buz

Well-Known Member
Was more or less a joke, relax there bud- you know I serve dope out here. :lol: I'm also a paying contributor to ASA, CA NORML, and other organizations working on bettering lives here in California.

My best recommendations on being active in the MMJ community:

Become an ASA Ambasador
Join the ASA Twitter
Sign up for Email Alerts
Make contributions to ASA

But most importantly... Go out and do the dirty work... because actions speak louder than words! :D
So I'll see you Saturday?
 

can.i.buz

Well-Known Member
What the fuck does this mean? Taken from the white papers "Marijuana, in any form, is neither valid nor legal."
 

Zig Zag Zane

Well-Known Member
What the fuck does this mean? Taken from the white papers "Marijuana, in any form, is neither valid nor legal."
I read the whole thing a couple days ago when it was first posted on norml's blog...it's just a gigantic medical marijuana bashing fest composed by a bunch of fucking pathetic police officers...they are simply lying when they say things like that. They also say it is not medicine etc etc... yeah because ...obviously...police are the ones who determine that right?:roll:...its just...ridiculous. Never fails to suprise me though.
 

can.i.buz

Well-Known Member
I read the whole thing a couple days ago when it was first posted on norml's blog...it's just a gigantic medical marijuana bashing fest composed by a bunch of fucking pathetic police officers...they are simply lying when they say things like that. They also say it is not medicine etc etc... yeah because ...obviously...police are the ones who determine that right?:roll:...its just...ridiculous. Never fails to suprise me though.
My daughter told me that in court, cops aren't required to know the law. What? Really? What planet do I live on?
 
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