Pubdate: Fri, 25 May 2001 Source: Record, The (CA) Copyright: 2001 The Record Contact: http://www.recordnet.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/428 Author: Francis P. Garland Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/ocbc.htm (Oakland Cannabis Court Case) JUDGE FEARS POT RULING ILLEGAL SAN ANDREAS -- Two Wallace ministers sentenced to probation for marijuana possession and given the green light to grow marijuana for medicinal purposes must return to court next week because a Calaveras County Superior Court judge fears the probation terms he approved are illegal. Ricky Dewayne Garner, 43, and Sue Melinda Garner, 40, pleaded guilty Monday to a misdemeanor charge of possessing more than an ounce of marijuana as part of a plea bargain endorsed by Judge Douglas Mewhinney. But it's possible those pleas could be withdrawn and the matter set for trial again, depending on the outcome of a hearing set for a week from today. Mewhinney essentially believes he could be aiding and abetting a federal felony by approving the probation terms that would allow the Garners to grow marijuana for themselves and those in their care. In exchange for pleading guilty to the misdemeanor marijuana-possession charges, the Garners, ministers of the Northern Lights Church, were placed on two years' court probation and agreed to give up their right to be free of searches. They also agreed to abide by medical-marijuana guidelines the county Board of Supervisors adopted last year to help law enforcement, county agencies and individuals implement Proposition 215. Those guidelines allow for six marijuana plants and 2 pounds for each person who has a doctor's recommendation for medicinal marijuana use. Proposition 215, approved by state voters in 1996, allows people suffering from certain medical conditions to use marijuana with a doctor's recommendation. It also states that marijuana possession and cultivation laws do not apply to a legitimate medical-marijuana patient or the patient's primary caregiver. A primary caregiver is a person who has consistently assumed responsibility for a medical-marijuana patient's housing, health or safety. The Garners were charged with felony marijuana cultivation after law enforcement agents raided their property last year and found 290 marijuana plants. The Garners claimed they were growing marijuana for themselves and more than a dozen other members of their congregation, all of whom had doctors' recommendations. The two were ordered to stand trial on the felony charges and the trial was scheduled to start Wednesday. But they agreed to the terms of a plea bargain Monday and Mewhinney pronounced their sentences the same day. But Mewhinney called the Garners' attorneys and Seth Matthews, a deputy district attorney, on Tuesday and conducted a conference call, during which he outlined his concerns. Those concerns largely stemmed from the recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling that held the Oakland Cannabis Buyers Cooperative, by distributing medicinal marijuana, was not exempt from prosecution under federal drug laws. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh Sutcliffe