Pubdate: Thu, 25 Apr 2002 Source: Daily Californian, The (CA Edu) Copyright: 2002 The Daily Californian Contact: http://www.dailycal.org/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/597 Author: Mike Meyers, Contributing Writer CITY DIRECTS POLICE TO SHUN DEA IN POT BUSTS Measure Passes Council Smoothly The Berkeley City Council quietly and unanimously passed a resolution affirming the city's support for medical marijuana Tuesday night. Against the recommendation of City Manager Weldon Rucker, the council directed the Berkeley Police Department not to cooperate with the Drug Enforcement Administration in investigations of medical marijuana clubs. In a meeting dominated by the controversial "Crisis in the Middle East" proposal, few in the packed council chambers noticed when Mayor Shirley Dean moved the marijuana resolution to the front of the agenda, where it was dispatched without discussion. "We could have given a lot of speeches on how great we think (medical marijuana) is, but I'm more interested in getting things done," said Councilmember Kriss Worthington. The city's Police Review Commission drafted the measure, which is similar to a law San Francisco passed late last year. The measure directs the police department to enforce Proposition 215, the 1996 state initiative legalizing medical marijuana. But marijuana use of any kind is illegal under federal law, which supercedes state law, so the DEA has ignored Prop. 215. David Ritchie, chair of the Police Review Commission, said the DEA should give up its prosecution of medical marijuana, in light of more serious problems facing the federal government. "They don't have the moral authority and they certainly don't have the facts on their side," he said. Despite the measure's passage, the police department's relationship with the DEA will not suffer, said DEA Special Agent Richard Meyer. "We know we have the moral support of the (Berkeley police) officers," he said. "It is an inconvenience, but it's something we can live with." Meyer said the new law will not "stop us from doing our jobs." He said the DEA only busts medical marijuana clubs when evidence from other investigations leads them in that direction. The DEA has never raided a Berkeley medical marijuana club, but two months ago it made a major bust in San Francisco. The agency informed the San Francisco Police Department just before it raided the Harm Reduction Center, a medical marijuana distribution club. City police assisted only in crowd control, Meyer said. Initially an opponent of the measure, Dean said she feared it would draw the DEA's attention to the city and invite a similar bust. Dean said she changed her mind after the DEA said the measure would not affect its relationship with Berkeley police. "I was more concerned with a, 'hey, keep a low profile,' kind of thing," she said. "But once you don't have a low profile, you can't go back." As an alternative to the commission's resolution, Rucker recommended the council endorse a proposed federal bill that would leave medical marijuana laws to the discretion of states. Most of the public attended the meeting to weigh in on the controversial proposal to divest from Israel. Only one member of the public testified in favor of the medical marijuana measure. None testified against it. Councilmember Polly Armstrong called the medical marijuana debate "old news," and said she was not surprised at the measure's easy passage. "I think it's real clear Berkeley people across the board think that if you need to smoke marijuana, you ought to be able to smoke marijuana," she said. The council, however, tabled a second measure calling for the city's support for Ed Rosenthal, a high-profile marijuana grower arrested in the Harm Reduction Center bust. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom