Pubdate: Sun, 9 Feb 2003 Source: Newsday (NY) Copyright: 2003 Newsday Inc. Contact: http://www.newsday.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/308 Author: Thomas D. Elias, Special Correspondent Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Ed+Rosenthal 'GURU OF GANJA' STIRRING THE POT San Francisco - Ed Rosenthal, known as the "guru of ganja," will go to prison later this year for growing marijuana for medical use, although he was authorized to do so by the city of Oakland, unless an appeals court intervenes. But some medipot supporters say his conviction last week is already giving their cause a major boost. Publicity about the case, in which several jurors later apologized to Rosenthal for their verdict, "has done more for medical marijuana and jury nullification than all our efforts of the past 10 years," said Steven Kubby, founder of the American Medical Marijuana Association, who says marijuana is the only reason he is alive 26 years after being diagnosed with a rare form of adrenal cancer. The case pits California's Proposition 215, which voters passed in 1996 to allow the use of marijuana for medical purposes with a doctor's permission, against the U.S. Justice Department. The federal government does not recognize Proposition 215 and has prosecuted more than a dozen medical marijuana users and growers under federal drug laws. An estimated 400 medipot users, most from California, have taken refuge in Canada in the past year because of that nation's recently adopted rules sanctioning medical use of pot. Six of the 12 jurors in Rosenthal's case have joined him in calling for a new trial, saying they convicted him Monday only because crucial information about Proposition 215 had been withheld from them. "For the first time in my life, I find myself questioning the court system," jury foreman Charles Sackett III said last week at a rally here on Rosenthal's behalf. Judge Charles Breyer refused to allow testimony showing that Rosenthal was growing pot under supervision of Oakland city officials for use by severely ill patients in compliance with both state law and local ordinances. When one witness mentioned Proposition 215, Breyer cut him off and took over the questioning. He ruled repeatedly that because Rosenthal was on trial under federal charges, the only relevant question was whether he grew marijuana plants or not. His motives, the judge said, could not be considered. Rosenthal, a columnist for the marijuana lovers' magazine High Times who has also written books about how to grow pot discreetly, faces a prison term of between 5 years and 85 years when he is sentenced in June. Legal scholar Alan Dershowitz of Harvard Law School said he doesn't believe Rosenthal's conviction will stand up on appeal. "I suspect Charlie's older brother [U.S. Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer] will overrule him," Dershowitz told the San Francisco Examiner. "When there's a conflict between federal and state law in a criminal case, the jury ought to know about it." He cited a Texas case involving possession of a handgun near a school, legal under Texas law but prohibited by federal law. The Supreme Court sided with the Texas law in that case, ruling that regulation of schools is a state issue. "Here we're talking about health care, which is very much a state issue, too," Dershowitz said. Just one day after the Rosenthal trial ended, San Diego became the 15th California city to set standards for how much pot medical marijuana patients are allowed to possess - one pound - without fear of state or local prosecution. But neither San Diego nor any other city provides an official system for growing or distribution, and Drug Enforcement Administration spokesman Richard Meyer said that any officials who set up such a system would be subject to arrest by federal agents. Many city police chiefs, county sheriffs and district attorneys, including those in San Francisco and San Jose and in the pot-growing "Emerald Triangle" counties of Mendocino and Humboldt on California's north coast, refuse to cooperate with federal agents seeking to arrest medipot patients. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake