Pubdate: Tue, 08 Oct 2002 Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (WI) Copyright: 2002 Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Contact: http://www.jsonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/265 Author: Lisa Sink and Mike Johnson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/af.htm (Asset Forfeiture) PAIR SEEN AS MARTYRS IN EFFORT TO LEGALIZE POT Arrests, Forfeiture Action Led To Suicide, Their Children Say Four of the Schilling children showed up for their parents' funeral wearing T-shirts bearing messages such as, "Dare to know the truth about marijuana." To them, Dennis and Denise Schilling are martyrs to the cause of legalizing the use of marijuana, particularly for medicinal purposes. Their parents, they say, were driven to hang themselves in a Madison motel last month under the threat of prison and forfeiture of their Big Bend home, the result of being accused of growing marijuana and hallucinogenic mushrooms there with one of their sons, Joshua. In the couple's death notice, the children included: "Taking care of your health should not be a crime," a reference to their mother's use of marijuana, which she said in a suicide note helped her fight mental illness and chronic pain from a back injury. But Dennis Schilling's brother, William, said such an attempt to politicize the deaths is hogwash. "I think that their children have turned them into martyrs for this drug cause," he said. "Drugs lead to no fruit. They only lead to being a vegetable." William Schilling said he was outraged by the spectacle of the funeral, where many visitors donned the same pro-marijuana T-shirts that four of the couple's five adult children wore. Mourners were asked to sign a petition pressing for the legalization of marijuana. "I flipped out," William Schilling said. Waukesha County District Attorney Paul Bucher said, "I'd hardly describe them as martyrs. Any time you have a tragedy like that, you look for scapegoats. "They obviously had significant problems. I'm sorry that they felt they had no way out. I'm very sorry for the family. Of course we don't want that to happen. It's a tragic case." To those who would say marijuana should be legalized, prosecutor Lloyd Carter replied: "Go talk to the experts on drug addiction and treatment and ask them what drug they say their clients started with. The ones using cocaine and heroin." But Denise Schilling wholeheartedly disagreed with that viewpoint. Drug use defended In a suicide note, she wrote that marijuana and hallucinogenic mushrooms were the only things that helped soothe her mental and physical anguish. Denise Schilling wrote that her 20-year-old son had nothing to do with her drug operation, although a criminal complaint charged him with selling marijuana to undercover agents. She said that she turned to illegal drugs after traditional therapies failed to relieve her pain. "I had tried every politically correct route, from religion to psychotropic drugs, and none of these avenues had helped me in any way," she wrote. "Perhaps someday people like me will not be so persecuted. Perhaps someday it will not be a crime to take care of your health." Joshua Schilling apparently takes no offense at having to face the music alone, now that his parents are dead. After a court hearing Monday, he echoed the message from his parents' death notice. "Supporting your health should not be a crime," he said, before a relative persuaded him to refrain from further comment. But his brother Caleb said he blamed the legal system for pushing his parents to suicide. "We're being screwed by all these people," he said. Forfeiture action debated Denise Schilling's attorney, Martin Kohler, said the couple were distraught after deputies from the U.S. marshal's office hand- delivered a notice of the forfeiture action against the couple's home. "What pushed them over the edge was the house," Kohler said. "She emotionally couldn't deal with it." Kohler said the authorities were overzealous. "Do we really want to punish a mom-and-pop operation?" he said. "Everything is by the book, and we don't stop and really see who some of the people are in the criminal justice system. "And that's too bad because everybody's not evil, and the Schillings certainly weren't evil and didn't have to be crushed like this." But U.S. Attorney Steven Biskupic, whose office filed the forfeiture action against the Schillings' home, said Kohler and the Schilling children have misplaced their anger. Biskupic said there was "substantial drug activity linked to the house." "There wasn't just one joint in the house. This was a grow operation," he said. "That was the allegation." The Schillings - both 48 - received the notice of the forfeiture action against their $118,000 home on Sept. 20, five days before their bodies were found hanging in a motel room on E. Washington Ave. in Madison. They left notes containing "suicidal comments" on the door and on the bed, said Madison police Officer Larry Kamholz, the department's spokesman. According to court records: The Waukesha Metro Drug Enforcement Unit received a tip earlier this year that there was a marijuana growing operation at the Schillings' property. An undercover officer and a confidential informant bought a total of one-quarter of an ounce of marijuana for $120. Officers searched the home and found 21 marijuana plants being grown, 12.1 grams of mushrooms and drug paraphernalia. Joshua Schilling told police he had been selling marijuana over the past year, including to some of his father's close friends. He told police he had been smoking marijuana since seventh or eighth grade and he had smoked pot with his parents. The three were charged June 27 and released on $3,750 bail. The charges included maintaining a drug house, manufacturing marijuana and mushrooms, and possession with intent to deliver marijuana and mushrooms. The executive director of the NORML Foundation, an arm of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, said the Schillings' suicides could have been connected to the forfeiture action. "I'm never amazed to hear that people sunk to the level of committing suicide" after getting forfeiture notices, said Allen St. Pierre, executive director of the Washington, D.C.-based group. He called the forfeiture law in cases involving small amounts of marijuana an "overbearing" tentacle of government. St. Pierre said murderers, rapists and white-collar criminals who embezzle millions don't face similar forfeiture actions. "You can use alcohol until you drink yourself into a coma. You can die from tobacco use. . . . All that is OK. But as soon as you use marijuana, you feel this incredible weight of the government," he said. Biskupic discounted those assertions. "I've been prosecuting white-collar cases for more than a decade, and whenever possible, we try to seize as many assets as we can," the U.S. attorney said. In the case of the Schillings, Biskupic said, the government had only just begun forfeiture proceedings. "In this case, nobody seized the house yet. We were not locking them out of the house . . . That was a long way off. They certainly had the right to come to court and challenge it," Biskupic said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D