Pubdate: Thu, 31 Oct 2002 Source: San Diego Union Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2002 Union-Tribune Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.uniontrib.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/386 Author: Jeff McDonald, Union-Tribune Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) CASE MAY TEST COSTA RICA DRUG LAW Former County Resident Facing 15 Years in Prison for Growing 12 Pot Plants His romance with Costa Rica started budding when he was barely out of high school. White sand beaches, sapphire water and a steady march of waves conspired to steal Andy Seidensticker from his hometown San Diego. His ventures south grew more frequent and prolonged. By the mid-1990s, the Poway High School graduate was living year-round in a remote beach village called Mal Pais and running his surf shop with a friend from California. He rode waves every chance he got. He married his girlfriend, and they had a baby daughter. Life was bountiful for the U.S. expatriate, until police following an anonymous tip showed up at his home in February and arrested Seidensticker and his wife, Edith, on suspicion of illegal cultivation of 12 marijuana plants. Him, they took away to Robles Prison in Puntarenas, nearly a day's travel from their hamlet. Her, they arrested but released on bail after several days because she is a citizen of Costa Rica. Now Seidensticker, 32, is facing up to 15 years in prison under a strict drug law that went into effect weeks before his arrest. After more than eight months behind bars, Seidensticker is scheduled to make his first appearance in a Costa Rican court today. "His spirits are really good, although once in a while he gets down," said his father, Steve Seidensticker, a North Park engineer who has spent most of this year trying to untangle his son's legal problems. "He's terribly frustrated by the inability of his lawyers to do anything," Steve Seidensticker said. There is little doubt Andy Seidensticker is guilty. He admitted as much to police. But until early this year, growing a few marijuana plants was not a crime in Costa Rica. Agents found the plants at the beach house Seidensticker shared with his wife and 4-year-old daughter, Clarissa. The plants yielded 61 grams of marijuana, just more than two ounces. Steve Seidensticker said that just before his son's arrest, Andy had complained to police about a neighborhood thief. He thinks the call leading officers to his son's house might have come from that man. The arrest raises questions about how small-time drug users are punished in the Central American nation, and it may become a test case for the new law. It also attracted the attention of a San Diego congressman, who asked the president of Costa Rica to show leniency to Seidensticker. No one from the Costa Rican embassy in Washington, D.C., or at government offices in the capital of San Jose or in Puntarenas would discuss the case. Repeated calls and e-mail messages to multiple departments were not returned. Tough Terms Costa Rica's Illegal Substances Act was designed to combat trafficking and money laundering, rather than simple drug possession. Adopted last December under pressure from the United States, it makes no distinction between marijuana, cocaine, heroin or other narcotics. Nor does the law take into account the amount of drugs a person might possess, or even whether a suspect is accused of manufacturing or selling such banned substances. Until Jan. 11, when the legislation took effect, growing a small number of marijuana plants for personal use was not illegal, defense attorney Mauricio Brenes said. Brenes said the punishment his client is facing far outweighs the crime. For example, kidnapping can rate a prison term as short as six months and rape is punishable by as few as two years in custody, he said. "A person holding one ton of coke should not be judged under the same rules as one who holds 61 grams of marijuana. . . . It is obvious to me that Andy is going to be a guinea pig in the practical application of this law." So far, claims from Brenes that the law is unconstitutional have not worked. The court also refused to hear arguments that the search was illegal or that Seidensticker was denied an interpreter at the time of his arrest. Officials from the U.S. Embassy in San Jose have visited Seidensticker three times. Beyond seeing that he is adequately cared for, there is little they can do. An embassy spokeswoman declined to discuss the case because Seidensticker has not signed a privacy waiver. But she said the Costa Rican government is ratcheting up prosecutions on drug violators. "Costa Ricans have made it a priority to work on counter-drug-trafficking issues," said Marcia Bosshardt of the U.S. Embassy in San Jose. "They're working to make those laws effective." There are 45 other Americans in Costa Rican prisons, Bosshardt said, 31 on drug charges. It was unclear how many of those are serving time for possession rather than trafficking. About 500,000 Americans visit the country every year, and between 25,000 and 35,000 live permanently in a nation of 4 million people, one of the more stable and democratic governments in Central America. Just as in the United States, marijuana and cocaine are widely available in Costa Rica and widely used, residents and tourists say. Only rarely have users or small-scale growers such as Seidensticker been charged, said David Boddiger, a Chicago native who has worked as a reporter at the Tico Times newspaper in San Jose for more than a year. "It is common to see people smoking marijuana on the beach, in parks, in the street, outside bars, etc.," Boddiger said in an e-mail interview. "It is difficult to determine where police officers and the police force in general will draw the line in such a gray area." By The Numbers According to the Organization of American States, a coalition of Western Hemisphere governments that deals in trade, human rights and other issues, Costa Rica made 4,953 arrests on drug trafficking and possession charges in 2000, the most recent year for which statistics are available. That was a major increase over the previous year, when 848 people faced drug charges. Through the 1990s, the number of drug arrests regularly hovered in the hundreds. Government leaders began debating the stiffer drug law in early 2000, in part due to pressure from the United States, which spends more than $8 million a year to finance the Inter-American Drug Abuse Control Commission. With a goal of eliminating drug trafficking, the commission of 34 member nations works under the Organization of American States but is an independent agency. The United States is by far its biggest financial supporter. In debate before passage of the Costa Rican law, legislator Otto Guevara complained about the disparity in prison terms. Three times he tried to lessen sentences for casual users but failed. "We don't want to send a message to the international community that Costa Rica is not fighting against drugs," lawmaker Carlos Vargas Pagan responded, according to congressional records. Tom Riley of the Office of National Drug Control Policy in Washington, D.C., declined to discuss the Seidensticker case. He downplayed any role the United States might have had in Costa Rica's decision to arrest low-level drug users. "I don't think there's any effort from the United States to tell Costa Rica to arrest people growing small quantities of marijuana," Riley said. "There is an organizing effort in the hemisphere to work together on these drug issues. Drugs don't respect borders." U.S. Rep. Bob Filner called Seidensticker's possible 15-year sentence "a great injustice." Filner wrote letters to the president of Costa Rica and to the U.S. ambassador appealing for leniency and intervention, so far to no avail. "There is no evidence that (the Seidenstickers) sold, bought or traded marijuana," Filner wrote to President Abel Pacheco in August. "They are not and never have been drug dealers." Filner received no response from the Costa Rican leader, and a September letter from Ambassador John J. Danilovich said there was nothing he could do to secure Seidensticker's release or even to expedite a trial. Three times in the past months, Seidensticker has been told he would likely be released, either on bail or outright. Each time, the reports proved groundless. "It would be great to have him back," said Aaron Abernathy, a transplant from Morro Bay who co-owns the Corduroy to the Horizon surf shop with Seidensticker. "He taught me everything I know." - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager