Pubdate: Tue, 13 Feb 2001 Source: Daily Iowan, The (IA) Copyright: 2001 The Daily Iowan Contact: Attn: Viewpoints Editor, 201N Communications Center, Iowa City IA 52242 Page and Section: 2 A, Metro Website: http://www.dailyiowan.com/ Author: Chao Xiong, Peter Rugg Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hemp.htm (Hemp) LAW-ENFORCEMENT AGENTS RAID HEMP CAT Law-enforcement Agents Seize Records, Computers And Smoking Accessories. An undisclosed amount of merchandise, financial records and four computers were taken from a local hemp store and the owner's Iowa City home during a search by approximately 40 officers from the Drug Enforcement Agency Sunday. Hemp Cat owner Adam Engelby said the DEA served him with two search warrants early Sunday, one for his home and another for his business, which is located at 114 1/2 E. College St. Engelby said law-enforcement agents took two computers from his home and two from the Hemp Cat store, financial records from both locations and smoking accessories from the store during the raids. The searches lasted about three hours each, he said. Approximately 10 officers searched his home while 30 others searched his business simultaneously, he said. "They were courteous and polite, very professional," Engelby said. "There were a million things running through my mind. I was in a state of shock more than anything." The Hemp Cat stopped business for the day after Sunday's raid and closed its doors four hours early Monday evening. "I don't plan to sell any of the stuff that was seized in the future," Engelby said, refusing to elaborate on the smoking accessories the DEA confiscated. He plans to keep the store open and is optimistic it will survive without the seized merchandise. Engelby has hired an attorney and the "wheels are in motion," he said. Engelby said he was never arrested during the raids and has not been charged with anything relating to Sunday's search. DEA spokesman Al Overbough said he could not confirm or deny the raid on the Hemp Cat. However, Des Moines police Lt. Clarence Jobe confirmed that the DEA searched the store Sunday and that two Des Moines police officers were on the task force. Jobe said he could not comment on the case because it is under federal jurisdiction. Despite his initial shock, Engelby said the search was not a complete surprise. "I guess, in the back of your mind, you always have an idea something like that could happen when you're selling questionable smoking accessories," he said. Hemp Cat employee Paula Balkenende said that, to the best of her knowledge, all the merchandise was legal. Iowa City police officers made it a habit to visit the store once a month, chat with customers, and visit the back room, where smoking accessories were displayed, she said. Balkenende said she watched as plain-clothes DEA officers collected boxes of evidence Sunday. "It just truly made me sick, and I thought how unfair it was to (Engelby) and the employees because we haven't done anything wrong," she said. "I don't think the Hemp Cat's going to do the business it's done now that it's been harassed repeatedly." - --- MAP posted-by: GD