Pubdate: Mon, 16 Sep 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

ODD TWISTS LEAVE COUPLE IN CENTER OF POT DEBATE

Mike Corral is a soft-spoken man with a love for all things that grow. His 
wife, Valerie, with a shock of auburn hair, exudes a spiritual presence and 
has a bright smile.

Except for a few of life's twists and turns, the couple say they would be 
living a quiet, private life in the mountains.

"I love being in the garden," Mike Corral said, standing in a barren patch 
of dirt on the property where they live north of Davenport.

But life has been anything but quiet for the Corrals in recent days, or the 
past decade, for that matter. Willy-nilly, the unassuming couple has become 
something of a poster couple for the national medical-marijuana movement.

That was clear even before a small army of federal agents raided their 
property last week, plucking about 130 not-quite-mature plants grown for 
members of the Wo/Men's Alliance for Medical Marijuana, the local pot club 
Valerie runs.

The raid not only shocked the 238 members of the group, most of them 
terminally ill and dependent on the cooperative for medicinal pot, it 
disgusted a few area elected officials.

The Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors and Santa Cruz City Council 
passed resolutions condemning the raid. Council members have gone as far as 
to allow the alliance to use City Hall on Tuesday to distribute marijuana 
to its members.

So the quiet life will have to wait for another day for the Corrals. This 
is the time to speak up, they say.

Medical marijuana may be a novel issue for some, but it is a "life and 
death issue for others," Valerie Corral said.

They're not in the fight for publicity or fame. The speak, they say, to 
show the nation and the world the faces of the sick people who need 
marijuana to ease their pain. They've spoken to just about every major 
newspaper in the state since the raid. USA Today was here for an interview 
and CNN is expected this week. That's along with a slew of news reports and 
editorials that have appeared across the country in the wake of the raid.

"The media is the way America speaks to one another," Valerie Corral said.

They dispute the notion they are glorifying drugs. In fact, they say, a 
Wo/Men's Alliance for Medical Marijuana gathering, with its sometimes 
emaciated and dying patients, can feel as emotionally troubling as it can 
be uplifting.

The couple knows first-hand how marijuana can seem like a god-send to 
people in pain. Valerie herself has been down that road.

An automobile accident in 1973, too bizarre to even call freakish, left her 
with brain injuries that caused epilepsy. Valerie was a passenger in a 1965 
Volkswagen bug, and was cruising in the desert outside Reno, Nev., with a 
girlfriend.

The teens spotted a World War II era P-51 plane flying unusually low. They 
pulled to the side. The plane whizzed past.

As they pulled the VW back onto the highway, the plane made a looping turn 
and roared toward them. The Bug lifted off the ground, and both girls were 
thrown from the car.

She got a $40,000 settlement. But years of traditional medicine left her in 
a stupor and frustrated. She had so many seizures she couldn't be left alone.

Then one day Mike read an article in a medical journal that said pot could 
relieve seizures like the ones Valerie was suffering.

She tried a joint.

Within four years, she was off all traditional medicines and her seizures 
were a thing of the past.

The story could have ended there. The Corrals could be living in their 
mountain digs, taking care of themselves, growing some vegetables. A look 
around their garden reveals Mike's gardening prowess. Corn and tomatoes 
grow nearby the now-vacant pot plot. He experiments with tropical fruits.

But in 1992 they were busted.

That time it was by the county Sheriff's Office, operating with state 
marijuana patrols. After a preliminary hearing, the charges against Valerie 
Corral were dropped based on a medical necessity defense. Another raid in 
1993 resulted in no prosecution.

When word of the first arrest got out in the media, other sick people 
became interested. The collective known as Wo/Men's Alliance for Medical 
Marijuana emerged.

"I guess we have Al Noren to thank for that," Corral said, alluding to the 
former Santa Cruz County sheriff.

While marijuana has been the center of the collective, it's about more than 
that. Members help one another. They are a community. Valerie has spent 
countless final moments with members who are dying.

"That's part of the gift I'm offered," she said. "I feel honored to be 
asked to be there."

That commitment eventually pushed the Corrals to the forefront of the 
medical marijuana debate. They helped craft state Proposition 215, a 
voter-approved initiative passed in 1996 that allows marijuana for medical use.

"They are definitely saints of the medical-marijuana movement," said Steph 
Sherer of the national medical-marijuana group Americans for Safe Access.

However, the federal Drug Enforcement Administration has been unwavering in 
its take on WAMM and medical marijuana in general. Marijuana is against 
federal law. Period. Forget the state proposition, the feds say. Federal 
law is the law of the land,.

And until the courts or national politicians wade into the debate, the DEA 
raids and arrests will continue.

That irks people like the Corrals and their supporters, who question why 
the feds are targeting groups like theirs during a time of international 
terrorism.

Members of the collective, meanwhile, fear for its future.

No charges have been filed yet against the Corrals, nor have motions to 
forfeit the property that the federal agents raided. The government has a 
five-year statute of limitations to file an action, though.

For the Corrals, the past week has been a blur. They are angered that their 
government has chosen to pick a fight with sick people but grateful for the 
support they've received locally.

"I come to tears," Mike said while standing in his barren garden. "It all 
blends together, the tears, the laughter, the fear, the joy."
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