Judge Again Orders Tacoma Police To Return Man's Pot. Will This Be "The" Case???

FranJan

Well-Known Member
Thanks to thenewstribune.com (Tacoma) for this.

Is anyone out there watching this? This could be the case that starts the ball rolling on true legalization and reinforcing state rights. I would love to see the cops show up with no weed or if they do, they have a SWAT team deliver it for that full circus effect. What happens if they give the guy back the wrong weed? Will his lawyer sue the piss out of the city? Looks like the lawyers are gonna clean up again I bet :(.

Judge Again Orders Tacoma Police To Return Man's Pot
SEAN ROBINSON; Staff writer​
Published: April 25, 2013 at 9:55 p.m. PDT — Updated: April 26, 2013 at 3:29 a.m. PDT

http://www.thenewstribune.com/2013/04/25/2573492/judge-again-orders-tacoma-police.html


Give the man his marijuana. That was the gist of a simple order Tacoma Municipal Court Judge Jack Emery gave to Tacoma police two months ago. Police refused Thursday, Emery repeated himself with emphasis: Police have seven days to comply with his Feb. 28 order and return the pot to Tacoma resident Joseph L. Robertson, or face a possible order of contempt. “Appeal or comply,” Emery told assistant city attorney John Walker. “Or next week, show up, and I would advise you to bring counsel.” The ruling was a small procedural victory for Robertson, but it could set the stage for a precedent-setting debate, and a collision between state and federal laws governing marijuana.

Police seized the pot in May 2012 after pulling Robertson over for speeding. The officer who made the stop reported smelling marijuana inside Robertson’s car and later found a small amount. Robertson was cited for driving without a valid license and misdemeanor marijuana possession and released. City prosecutors dismissed the possession charge in December after the state’s vote to legalize the possession of small amounts of marijuana. Robertson then asked for his pot back, and provided proof of medical marijuana authorization. The city refused, which prompted Emery’s Feb. 28 order Thursday. Robertson and his attorney, Jay Berneburg, were back in court, complaining that the city hadn’t complied. Robertson, a big man with a pony tail, wore an old Oakland Raiders jersey and sunglasses. Berneburg, also pony-tailed, wore a suit. “Contemptuous” was the word Emery used to describe the city’s response to his earlier order. He held up a thick stack of legal briefs from the city, delivered one day before Thursday’s hearing. The city had blown the deadline to make such arguments, even if they had merit, the judge said.

The next step is uncertain – the next hearing is set for May 2. The matter could be resolved by then, or it could bounce up another legal level. Emery’s order requires the city to fill out a release form and transmit it to the Pierce County Sheriff’s Department, which operates the property room where seized evidence, (including Robertson’s pot) is stored. The ity could fill out the form and transmit it, leaving the onus of the decision on Pierce County. If the county refuses to return the pot, that could set up an appeal to Pierce County Superior Court. Pierce County Sheriff’s spokesman Ed Troyer said Tacoma police could collect the pot; but the sheriff’s office won’t hand it to Robertson. “It’s Tacoma’s case,” Troyer said. “If they want it, they can come and get it. ”Emery was careful to point out the jurisdictional tangle as he gave his ruling Thursday; he has legal authority over the city, but not the county. “I am going to order that you fill out the appropriate release and transmit it to the sheriff’s department,” Emery said, addressing Walker. “Then I’m going to set a hearing next week. I think there’s contemptuous behavior here. ”Emery added that the case was “a quagmire,” due to the conflicting provisions of state and federal law. After the hearing, Berneburg said that if the county refuses to return his client’s pot, he would file an appeal. “This isn’t gonna end,” Berneburg said. “This is not gonna end.”​
Sean Robinson: 253-597-8486
[email protected]

“This isn’t gonna end,” Berneburg said. “This is not gonna end.”- See what I mean about the lawyers ;).
 

BudMarLeY

Well-Known Member
mmmm, stale goods. im sure some people will buy it for a reduced price but man doesnt it jack up the seller of the product. police shoudl get in trouble for this sort of thing, and should have done more homework to make sure the bust was legit
 

BustinScales510

Well-Known Member
This has happened multiple times in California. While it seems decent of the judge, it didnt really have any larger effect.
 

LWD

Active Member
Judge ordered them to return the man back his herb. Injustice if they fail to do so and they will be in contempt. Give the man back his herb.
 

TreeOfLiberty

Well-Known Member
I've always wondered in cases like this what it costs in attorney fees trying to get back your herb when it was wrongfully taken. Example- suppose you had 1 pound taken from you in a MMJ state, and it takes $10,000 in paying an attorney who specializes in marijuana cases and 12 months time passes of multiple court dates before you finally get that 1 pound in your hands, then to add insult to injury, you find that it was sprayed with water and ate up with mold and completely worthless from the cops being assholes. At this point, you would be shit out of luck, or either back to paying the attorney more thousands in getting compensated which would be next to impossible.

That's just a scenario of why I'd just grit my teeth and let the shit go and save my money from handing it over to an attorney. I remember reading a lot of HighTimes stories back in the late 90's in the first few years after California's Prop 215 passed, many local California cops disobeyed Prop 215 and a lot of MMJ would get confiscated in traffic stops and never given back,sometimes including home grow MMJ cultivation confiscations. It took a lot of court cases back then to stop local California cops from doing shit like that and no telling how much money attorneys made back then by people fighting to get their MMJ back.

Californians went thru this shit bad in the first 3 to 4 years after Prop 215 passed.
 
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