Pubdate: Tue, 27 Feb 2001
Source: Village Voice (NY)
Copyright: 2001 Village Voice Media, Inc
Contact:  36 Cooper Square, New York, NY 10003
Feedback: http://www.villagevoice.com/aboutus/contact.shtml
Website: http://www.villagevoice.com/
Author: Andrew Friedman
Newshawk note: Orthodox Rabbi Yitzchak Fried Could Do Hard Time for Medical 
Marijuana

SACRIFICIAL LAMB

Toward the end of a recent hearing in Brooklyn Supreme Court, Judge Plummer 
E. Lott asked Rabbi Yitzchak Fried, who like so many other drug defendants 
in New York was waiving his right to trial and pleading guilty in exchange 
for a lighter sentence, if he had any questions about the charges against 
him. The Brooklyn district attorney's office had charged Fried with selling 
a total of more than seven ounces of marijuana to a police informant on 
five occasions in Borough Park. Under the plea, Fried would not serve more 
than three years in prison.

Fried, a 52-year-old man with soft features, a dark beard, meditative eyes, 
and the thin white strings of a tallis hanging past the edge of his gray 
pinstripe suit, answered with tension in his voice, "I have many questions."

The judge asked if he had sold the marijuana.

Fried answered stonily, "I sold it. But not for profit."

"Well, you may be a bad businessman. . . . "

"I was not doing business," Fried said. "It was medical marijuana."

Instead of the usual catechism of condescending queries and meek yeses, 
this questioning faltered along in this halting way for several minutes. 
Finally, the judge was satisfied. He said he would hear community members 
speak on the rabbi's behalf on April 12, then consider mitigating the 
one-to-three years to a split sentence or even probation. Rabbi Fried and 
his lawyer, Harry Kresky, grabbed their coats and left the courtroom.

In the hall, they explained that Fried's terse answers came not from 
disrespect for the judge but from his belief that marijuana relieves the 
symptoms of a number of serious illnesses and can help heroin addicts get 
off junk. Distributing the herb, they say, should not be a crime. "We never 
were denying that Rabbi Fried gave this person marijuana and at least 
recouped something," Kresky says. "The matter here is not whether the rabbi 
sold marijuana to a police informant. The matter is why it is criminal at 
all, whether it benefits people in pain."

Fried's case came out of a police sting early last year, during a 
particularly frantic time in Borough Park. In mid December 1999, Orthodox 
19-year-old Moshe Feiner overdosed on a cocktail of heroin and cocaine in 
an apartment there, and his death deeply shook the Orthodox community. That 
January a man called Fried, mentioning a friend of Moshe's and asking for 
marijuana. Fried, a well-known activist who had given marijuana to people 
with AIDS, MS, and cancer since the early 1990s, says the man described 
himself as "a sick person," suffering from AIDS, and said he was involved 
with a community of heroin addicts. For these reasons, Fried says, he began 
to sell small quantities of pot to the man, who appeared to be in his early 
thirties--about one or two ounces each time they met, along 46th, 47th, and 
48th streets, around 14th and 15th avenues in Borough Park.

Working with junkies since the '60s, Fried learned that heroin addicts 
often use marijuana not as a gateway into heroin, but as a gateway out. He 
sees this as another medical use. "Some people can get off heroin using 
Ibogaine and medical marijuana and they won't go for the hard stuff," Fried 
says. "There are older people, ex-addicts, who succeeded in getting off. 
Some of these people used medical marijuana to offset their heroin habit 
and get off and it worked."

Fried says he never called the man or sought him out, but in the coming 
weeks, the man found him several times, always asking for marijuana, always 
secretly carrying a tape recorder and a video camera in his knapsack. "He 
said he was in a desperate situation, and after seeing what happened to 
Feiner, I made a mistake," Fried says. "I admit I made a mistake. I'm not 
trying to be a renegade here. I just see this as a problem that's mushroomed."

Finally, on February 15, around 12:30 p.m., police arrested Fried near the 
corner of 13th Avenue and 47th Street in Borough Park. When he was 
arrested, he says, he had just been counseling the police informant to go 
to Narcotics Anonymous. Then a "crew" of officers appeared--the D.A.'s 
office says it was four--and took him to a detention house in Brooklyn, 
where he was held for two-and-a-half days, he says, waiting to make a $5000 
bail, without kosher meals or access to his tefillin. "There is supposed to 
be a Jewish liaison from the community, but since they had demonized me, no 
one even came to my aid," he says.

The D.A. indicted him on 10 counts of selling marijuana. If convicted, says 
Avery Mehlman, the lanky Orthodox prosecutor, Fried could have faced up to 
20 years in an upstate prison.

A few days after Brooklyn District Attorney Charles Hynes announced Fried's 
arrest in the community, Mothers Aligned Saving Kids (MASK), a group 
organized in 1997 to help Orthodox parents cope with issues facing their 
teenagers, held a symposium called "Parenting versus Panic," where Hynes 
received a community service award. "Why did they take a rabbi and set him 
up with a police informant all for one or two ounces of pot each?" Kresky 
asks. "Something's going on. That's not their m.o., unless someone asked 
them to do it, or unless they just happened on a sale.

"I was looking back at the article that ran in the Jewish Week when he was 
arrested," Kresky goes on. "And it's interesting. They lump together that 
six young men have died from overdoses, that people are upset, and that the 
rabbi was busted for selling pot. So if there is a problem in the Orthodox 
community with kids overdosing on heroin, it's not fair to bust the rabbi 
for selling pot and throw the book at him. He was not selling heroin and 
he's not accused of that. Whoever's selling heroin is still selling it. The 
rabbi is a decent person and he's not responsible for what they're upset 
about."

"They had to blame somebody and they targeted me," says Fried, who had 
actually stepped back from selling medical marijuana before his arrest, 
mostly referring callers to the New York Medical Marijuana Patients 
Cooperative in the East Village.

"The district attorney's office responded to community complaints," says 
Mehlman, who insists the informant appeared much younger than 30. "The 
information we had regarded the defendant selling marijuana to young 
members of the Orthodox community.

"The district attorney's narcotics bureau responds to each and every 
narcotics complaint made," he adds, "based on specific information and 
specific individuals."

Rabbi Yitzchak Fried lives in a two-family house in Flatbush with his wife, 
a special education teacher, and their seven children. They have a garden 
and an apple tree growing in the yard. He spent the early '90s on the Lower 
East Side, where his grandfather had been a rabbi, helping AIDS patients in 
harm-reduction programs along Avenue C. "I saw people who were dying of 
multiple sclerosis, AIDS, cancer," he says. "Being a rabbi I had to deal 
with it, not put my head under a rug and ignore it."

In 1994, Fried moved into the empty Eighth Street Shul, a century-old 
building that quickly became a crucial part of the local landscape. He ran 
drug and alcohol counseling programs there, held services, made $250,000 in 
repairs, served pay-as-you-can seders at Passover, and opened the doors as 
an emergency shelter. People stopped by for advice; the independent movie 
?, in which Rabbi Fried played a role, was filmed there; and Jewish 
philosopher Martin Buber's grandson held musical gatherings.

For a time, Fried also delivered medical marijuana to sick people, although 
never from the synagogue itself. "I started to deal directly with medical 
marijuana because it involved a cross-section of issues that were 
confronting me," he says. "I feel that society has a very wrong reading of 
the subject. It should be out of the hands of inexperienced law enforcement 
who don't know what it is. It should be in the hands of doctors and 
therapists."

The arrest has turned Rabbi Fried's life upside down. He lost his job 
teaching an afternoon class at a yeshiva. Prosecutors and reporters 
questioned whether Fried, who graduated with a master's degree in Hebrew 
letters from the Ohr Jerusalem Rabbinical Academy in Israel, was even a 
real rabbi. A numbness in his hands beset him under the stress. Child 
welfare workers came to his house and interviewed his children.

And the more the year progressed, the worse it got. In 1996, members of the 
original congregation of the Eighth Street Shul sued in State Supreme Court 
to take it back, so they could sell the building to a developer who would 
convert it into housing. In September, a judge ruled for the congregation. 
Two months before Fried went to trial, a city sheriff evicted his 
congregation from the shul and padlocked the gates.

Tension rattled the courtroom as fried and Kresky weighed the plea 
agreement. The district attorney had videotapes of the sales, and 
audiotapes of Fried's conversations with the informant. Nowhere on the 
tapes did the man mention having AIDS, Kresky says, but he did mention the 
name of a friend of the boy who died, which Fried maintains was a strong 
impetus for him to sell to him. Still, they decided it was too risky to 
tempt the fates at trial and opted to take the plea.

"Based upon the results of our investigation and a review of every single 
phone conversation between the confidential agent and the defendant which 
were taped in the presence of law enforcement officers, the agent never 
requested at any time medical use at all," Mehlman says.

After the hearing, Fried walked through the gray and rainy afternoon, 
across the sweeping stone expanse in front of the Brooklyn court to meet 
his probation officer. He wore a heavy black hat and a black overcoat. The 
frustration bottled in his submissive answers inside the court bubbled out. 
"I was a sitting duck for years because I was an advocate," Fried said, 
speedwalking across the plaza, scanning street names for Joralemon. "Most 
people hear that Rabbi Fried was arrested and think I'm some kind of demon 
for giving drugs to people. I am not. I am not interested in giving drugs 
to people.

"This is an herb that grows in the ground and is a benefit to society," 
Fried said. "The law is archaic. The masses are ready for it. But it 
becomes this legal chess game."

He quoted Scripture to describe how his approach to the "drug war" differs 
from that of the law-and-order set. "For every soul there are two wings on 
which to soar through its journey in the world: love and awe," he said. 
"The fear they're using is a one-wing job. They're not supplementing that 
by redirecting people, giving answers to people who go for drugs as a way 
to help. People need relief for their suffering.

"They use fear. That doesn't work with kids who are drawn to the other 
side. They use fear at the expense of the love side."

On April 12, Judge Lott will determine whether Fried goes to jail or 
receives probation.

"We're taking what the judge said very seriously," Kresky says. "Borough 
Park is one of the most conservative parts of New York. But to me the 
rabbi's work is very much in the Jewish tradition of doing good, of helping 
people less fortunate than you."
- ---
MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens