Pubdate: Wed, 02 Oct 2002 Source: Santa Cruz Sentinel (CA) Copyright: 2002 Santa Cruz Sentinel Contact: http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/394 Author: Brian Seals Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California) DEA CHIEF TELLS STATE TO EXPECT MORE POT RAIDS Federal drug agents will continue to raid marijuana plots, medicinal and otherwise, the agency's director said in a letter to state Attorney General Bill Lockyer. "As long as marijuana remains a Schedule I controlled substance, (the Drug Enforcement Administration) will continue its enforcement efforts targeting groups and individuals involved in its distribution," agency head Asa Hutchinson wrote in a Sept. 30 letter. Hutchinson's letter, obtained by the Sentinel, was in response to a Sept. 6 letter from Lockyer in which he criticizes a DEA raid on the Davenport garden of the Wo/Men's Alliance for Medical Marijuana, an area medical marijuana cooperative. Hutchinson questioned the medical validity of marijuana, saying it hasn't been approved by the Federal Drug Administration. And he said medical-marijuana laws in the states where it has been approved are being "abused to facilitate traditional illegal marijuana trafficking and associated crime." Medical-marijuana backers, like the alliance, say patients grow pot for themselves and no money changes hands. Hutchinson added that the federal agency is obliged by law to seize plants even if no prosecution results. That is the case with the cooperative, whose co-founders, Mike and Valerie Corral, were arrested during the raid, then released. Agents seized 167 plants, but no charges have been filed. Attorneys for the cooperative filed motions in federal court last week for the return of the plants. After the raid, Lockyer wrote: "The apparent decision by the DEA to put any kind of priority on such raids demonstrates a lack of good judgment and seriously threatens to wreck the historic productive partnership of the DEA and California's state and local law enforcement, undermining our efforts to fight dangerous drugs and the major narco-terrorist organizations that manufacture and distribute them." Hutchinson responded that the DEA continues to partner with state and local agencies around the state in eradicating marijuana. California is one of eight states that has approved marijuana for medical use, placing the state law at odds with the federal government. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D