Pubdate: Sat, 07 Sep 2002 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2002 San Jose Mercury News Contact: http://www.bayarea.com/mld/mercurynews Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/390 Author: Howard Mintz, Mercury News Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California) POT CLUB RAID SIGNALS NEW PUSH Federal Officials Step Up Assault On Medicinal Marijuana By raiding a nationally known medicinal marijuana farm in Santa Cruz this week, federal law enforcement officials served notice that they are escalating their legal assault in the Bay Area, the cradle of California's medical pot movement. While the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration has launched similar raids throughout the state during the past year, including one in San Francisco in February, the Santa Cruz operation marked the most aggressive crackdown on a major Bay Area medical marijuana outfit to date. The raid appeared to cement a policy change for the region's federal law enforcement officials, who for the most part have relied on civil court orders to weed out medical pot distributors since California enacted Proposition 215 six years ago. Medicinal pot advocates reacted angrily Friday to the raid on the cooperative owned by Valerie and Michael Corral, both of whom were involved in drafting the state initiative that legalized supplying marijuana to the sick and dying. The Corrals had been operating with the support of local law enforcement officials and political leaders. California Attorney General Bill Lockyer, a strong backer of Proposition 215, fired off a letter Friday to U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft, asking for a meeting and criticizing ``punitive expeditions'' against ``locally authorized medical marijuana operations.'' The raid also sparked protests Friday against the DEA in San Jose, San Francisco and Oakland. ``Where are the federal government's priorities?'' said Jeff Jones, executive director of the Oakland Cannabis Buyers Cooperative, which has been locked in a federal court battle with the Justice Department for four years. ``At the anniversary of 9/11, you would think the federal government and its agencies would have more important things to do than raid someone who has not caused harm.'' Federal prosecutors said Friday that they are still mulling over whether to file criminal charges against the Corrals, who were arrested and released Wednesday. Agents seized more than 100 marijuana plants, a shotgun and three rifles in the raid. ``No final decision has been made,'' said Charles Ben Burch, chief of the criminal division for the Northern California U.S. Attorney's Office. ``We're still considering the case.'' Richard Meyer, DEA spokesman in San Francisco, defended the raid, saying the Corrals have been flouting the law. The raid on the Corrals' farm, in the hills near Davenport, is the latest example of the seemingly irreconcilable tension between Proposition 215 and federal drug laws. The U.S. Supreme Court this year dealt a major blow to California and the six other states that permit medicinal marijuana when it ruled that there is no medical exception to federal drug laws. The ruling ensured that medicinal pot distributors, even with the support of local and state officials, could survive only if the federal government chose to leave them alone -- and that is not happening. The Supreme Court ruling came in a case brought in 1998 by the U.S. Justice Department against six Bay Area cannabis clubs, including Oakland's. At that time, the government took a different approach to medicinal pot suppliers in the Bay Area, suing in federal court to obtain court orders to shut the clubs down instead of raiding them and making arrests. The Bush administration, however, has taken a different tack than the Clinton administration, using DEA raids, criminal charges and even forfeiture laws to shutter the leading medicinal marijuana suppliers in California. Burch would not comment on whether San Francisco's new U.S. attorney, Kevin Ryan, has adopted any new policies on medicinal marijuana outfits. But statewide, there is growing evidence of a more aggressive approach. Last October, agents raided a West Hollywood cooperative and prosecutors have sued to seize the property. In that case, which involved the biggest medical marijuana operation in Southern California, no criminal charges have been brought. Scott Immler, the head of the club, said Friday that the raids and the attempt to seize the property, if successful, are ``equivalent to an organizational death penalty for us.'' Santa Clara University law professor Gerald Uelmen, who represents the Oakland pot club and is assisting in the Corrals' case, said the government could be vulnerable to a lawsuit on behalf of patients being denied medicinal pot as a result of the Santa Cruz raid. ``What they are using is hit and run. It's what they did in L.A. Clean it out and don't prosecute,'' Uelmen said. Meanwhile, Valerie Corral and other leading medicinal marijuana activists vowed at Friday's rallies to keep fighting the government. ``They can't know how many peoples' lives they are causing suffering in,'' Corral said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek