Pubdate: Mon, 10 Sep 2001 Source: Tahoe Daily Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2001 Tahoe-Carson Area Newspapers Contact: http://www.tahoe.com/tribune/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/443 Author: Doug Mattson JURY CAN'T INTERPRET MARIJUANA LAW Nevada City - Ambiguity prevailed in the first medical-marijuana case to challenge Nevada County's cultivation guidelines. How much marijuana is too much for a patient to grow? Jurors in John D. Cassatt's trial couldn't agree, and a mistrial was declared after they deadlocked Thursday in Nevada County Superior Court. Differences hinged on language in the Compassionate Use Act, which California voters passed as Proposition 215 in 1996. "I just think it's the way the law is - it's very, very vague. It doesn't set limits," said juror Chaylinn Tanguay of Grass Valley. Her vote changed from not guilty to guilty during four hours of deliberation. The jury stalled at 7 to 5 in favor of conviction and told Judge Ersel Edwards they were unlikely to reach the unanimity required for conviction. The judge scheduled a pretrial conference for today, and Deputy District Attorney Ken Tribby pledged to try Cassatt again. Jury foreman Harry Wyeth of Grass Valley considered Cassett not guilty and also cited vagueness. He and others got stuck on the law's phrasing of "reasonably related to" - the closest the statute comes to saying how much marijuana a given illness requires. Cassatt, a 51-year-old San Juan Ridge resident, claimed he suffers from hepatitis C and a brain injury sustained as a young man. "There was no question that he needed it," Wyeth said, "but the issue was he had a whole lot of plants." Sheriff's narcotics agents found 386 plants at Cassatt's home off Tyler-Foote Road when they arrested him Jun 27, 2000. The heights ranged from 18 inches to 3 1/2 feet. Just weeks before the bust, in an effort to overcome the law's language, the District Attorney's Office adopted guidelines that allow patients two pounds and 10 plants. Other counties developed similar measures - some more lenient, others more strict. The guidelines - reached after talks with law enforcement and marijuana activists - were designed to avoid Thursday's outcome. Cassatt's case creates doubt about how other cultivation cases will be handled., including a San Juan Ridge bust last week that allegedly netted 105 plants. "This is an issue that won't be put to bed in Nevada County," said a frustrated Tribby, who called the law poorly worded. "We have to get the issue resolved." As for Cassatt, a jovial, lanky figure, he was relieved to avoid conviction after the two-day trial, but felt jurors didn't hear enough about why he grew nearly 40 times the county limit. Some plants were needed to produce seeds for his subsequent crops. He also maintained that only half the plants would have become females, which produce the active ingredients in marijuana. "I have mixed feelings," he said of the non-verdict, "But I'm confident there will be in the future a meaningful, intellectual resolution." - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck