Pubdate: Fri, 24 Jan 2003 Source: Statesman Journal (OR) Copyright: 2003 Statesman Journal Contact: http://www.statesmanjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/427 Author: Dennis Thompson Jr. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) POLICE FIND POT, RETURN IT TO OWNER Two grams of marijuana were reportedly taken from a truck. Dennis Osbourn retrieved his missing marijuana from an unusual place Thursday =8B the Salem Police Department. Osbourn, a medical marijuana user, reported the two grams of weed stolen Tuesday from his truck in the parking lot of The Home Depot. An officer recovered the pot a day later. Lt. Bill Kohlmeyer said police returned it to its rightful owner because Osbourn is legally allowed to use it. `I think the police did a very, very good job of handling this,' Osbourn, 38, said. `Within two days they had my stuff back.' The pot disappeared after Osbourn went into the hardware store at 3795 Hagers Grove Road SE and realized that his shopping list was still in his truck. As he walked back, Osbourn said, he saw a man in a passing car give him an odd look. He made a note of the vehicle's license plate number. When he reached in to retrieve the list, Osbourn discovered that the purse containing the marijuana was gone. He had left his truck unlocked, with bot h his car keys and the purse on the driver's side floor. Osbourn called from the store to report the theft, providing police with th e car's description and license number. The next day, Salem Sgt. J.R. Miller stopped the car. The driver, Salem resident John Ripple, had the purse but said he found it lying in the parking lot and had intended to return it to its owner, Kohlmeyer said. The purse contained Osbourn's identification. Ripple, it turned out, is a medical marijuana user, too, Kohlmeyer said. `We're not even sure it was a theft,' Kohlmeyer said. =B3We don=B9t anticipate any criminal charges being filed. It's entirely possible that the victim knocked it out as he got out of the car.' About 3,600 Oregonians have medical marijuana cards. The law, approved by voters in 1998, allows patients with certain medical conditions to grow seven marijuana plants at a time and possess up to 3 ounces of marijuana. Osbourn said he smokes pot to dull the nausea caused by medication he takes for chronic kidney stones. He said he passed 12 stones last year and was hospitalized twice for renal failure. Losing the pot wasn't the worst part of the experience, Osbourn said, because his medical marijuana group provided him with more. Temporarily losing his pipe was worse. `I've been having to roll joints, which wastes it,' Osbourn said. =B3If I hav e my pipe, I can take a couple of quick hits and it doesn't waste it.' - --- MAP posted-by: Josh