Pubdate: Fri, 14 Nov 2003 Source: News-Review, The (OR) Copyright: 2003 The News-Review Contact: http://www.newsreview.info Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2623 Author: Christian Bringhurst Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) MEDICAL MARIJUANA HEIST LEADS TO PRISON TERM Bryan Clark Combs told the judge he was planning on getting some help for his alcohol and drug addictions -- until he "stumbled upon the garden." The 23-year-old Riddle man was sentenced by Douglas County Circuit Judge Joan Seitz to 15 months in prison and two years of post-prison supervision Thursday for raiding a legal medical marijuana garden in Riddle Sept. 25. Combs was caught with copious quantities of the medicinal crop by the man he stole it from, said Senior Deputy District Attorney Rick Wesenberg. He pleaded guilty to possession of a substantial quantity of marijuana and possession of methamphetamine in a case that highlighted what Wesenberg off-handedly described as "the perils of medical marijuana." "I made a bad mistake, and I was planning on doing some rehab before I stumbled upon the garden," Combs told Seitz. "I'm a bad alcoholic and a drug addict ... I just want to turn everything around while I'm still young." Craig Wilson, a friend of the victim's who also had his medical marijuana plants stolen, said they heard a rumor that Combs had recently acquired several "wet" plants, so they went to his apartment on Maple Street with some friends to confront him about it. "They opened the door, (and) there was like a party going on there," Wilson said. "I said, 'Come out here and talk to us.'" Wilson said once some of the people had cleared away they could see "a bunch of marijuana sitting on the table." The victim told Combs he was calling the police, prompting the party to quickly disperse, with Combs jumping out of a bathroom window and running away. "The odor of fresh marijuana was almost overwhelming," reports the investigating officer in his probable cause affidavit. "In plain view, I saw numerous marijuana stems on the floor in the living room. Some were bagged in a large lawn trash bag, others were just scattered about. Everywhere I looked I saw residual marijuana leaves strewn about the floor." The officer reported that 3.6 pounds of marijuana were seized that night, some of it drying on broiler pans, some stored in large sandwich bags, and some of it hung up to dry. "There was a large bud hanging from an oscillating fan in the living room," he states. A note in one of the bedrooms read "Gone to store for baggies, Bryan and Buckwheat." The victim recognized the marijuana as his own due to its "distinctive discoloration that occurred during the growing process," according to the affidavit. "He told me he used fertilizer on the plants a couple of months prior, and the fertilizer burned the plants," the officer reported. As further proof that the plants were his, Wilson said his friend went back to his house and retrieved the stalks of the plants that had been cut and was able to match them to the top half of the plants in Combs' apartment. Combs was arrested the next day. Wilson said he never reported the theft of his own plants. "I'm not used to calling the cops for marijuana things," he said. Wilson grows marijuana for a degenerative back condition and other chronic ailments. He said this was his first crop. "It was something that I started at the end of the summer," he said. "It was like growing tomatoes, but something different." Seitz said Combs is eligible for an alternative incarceration program, such as boot camp, if he is accepted. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin