Pubdate: Tue, 04 Mar 2003 Source: Sacramento Bee (CA) Copyright: 2003 The Sacramento Bee Contact: http://www.sacbee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/376 Author: Denny Walsh, Bee Staff Writer POT ACTIVIST'S PRISON TERM IS THROWN OUT In A Stunning Reversal, A U.S. Magistrate Opts For Probation Instead. In a remarkable reversal Monday, U.S. Magistrate Judge Peter A. Nowinski threw out the three-month prison term he imposed last week on medical marijuana activist Jeff Jones and placed him on probation for three years. The participants in the proceedings, as well as about 20 others seated in the courtroom, sat stunned as Nowinski announced his change of mind. In a scene as dramatic as any in the history of Sacramento's federal court, the judge took the bench and said, "I've given the matter a great deal of thought over the weekend. "My purpose is not to make life miserable for you," he told Jones. Nowinski related a Sunday conversation with his 17-year-old son about what he planned to do. "People will think you are responding to the publicity in the newspaper, and won't that be embarrassing to you?" his son asked. "Yes, it will be embarrassing to me," the judge said he replied. "But my feelings are not worth one day in jail for anybody." Nowinski had initially leaned toward probation for Jones, 38, who was found guilty by Nowinski in a non-jury trial of trying to influence prospective jurors. They were called for a major drug prosecution of a fellow medical marijuana advocate. Jones handed out written information about the case to some of the potential jurors as they entered the courthouse. But Nowinski was angered over defense attorney Michael Bigelow's argument at Thursday's sentencing that Jones should not have to pay restitution for the loss of a prospective panel because a jury could have been salvaged from the group. Bigelow argued that U.S. District Judge Frank C. Damrell Jr. acted out of "pique, rather than reason" when he disqualified all 42 prospective jurors during last year's trial of Bryan Epis and convened a second panel. In imposing the three-month prison sentence, Nowinski said Jones, who heads the Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative, was not taking responsibility for his conduct, and was trying to blame Damrell for the Epis trial disruption. After Thursday's stormy proceeding, Bigelow filed an appeal. He orally withdrew the appeal Monday in court when he learned of Nowinski's intention to resentence his client to probation. Early Monday, as Jones was preparing to report to a federal prison in Atwater, about 110 miles south of Sacramento, word came to Bigelow that Nowinski wanted him and his client in court at 2 p.m. The judge noted during the proceeding that the flier Jones handed to prospective jurors included information Damrell had ruled inadmissible at Epis' trial. He said he finds "implausible" Jones' insistence that he was unaware at the time of the precise contents of the flier. That, plus the argument that "it is all Judge Damrell's fault," convinced him that Jones still does not see the real issue -- the integrity of the jury system, Nowinski said. "The punishment I meted out (Thursday) seemed unavoidable," he added. He then related two incidents to the hushed courtroom. He said he and Damrell lunched together Monday and, as they returned, one of about a dozen people demonstrating outside the courthouse in support of Jones approached them -- unaware of their identities. The demonstrator handed Nowinski a flier headed, "How could this happen in America?" and asked, "Did you hear what happened here last week?" The judges walked on without comment. Secondly, Nowinski said, on the day he was taking the drastic step of reversing a sentence, "I would rather not have learned that Judge Damrell and I each received a letter in the 16th-floor mailroom containing a white powder." He paused, then declared, "Passions are way too high." Testing by hazardous material officers later showed the substance to be nontoxic, sources said late Monday. The judge then sentenced Jones to three years on probation, plus restitution of $3,925 -- the cost of bringing the first group of prospective jurors to court for the Epis trial. "The panel was tainted by your conduct," he told Jones. Nowinski noted that Monday's sentence follows the recommendation of a probation officer in a pre-sentence report to the judge. Prosecutor Christopher Hagan pointed out that the report also recommends a $1,000 fine, and asked Nowinski to include it in the sentence. "I think I'll not today," the judge replied. "I'm sure Mr. Jones has had $1,000 worth of anguish over the weekend." He then asked Jones if he had anything to say. At first, the defendant was hesitant but, after conferring with Bigelow, he told Nowinski: "Am I sorry I handed out this material? Absolutely. Am I sorry I broke the law? Absolutely. Am I sorry I disrupted the court? Absolutely." To which Nowinski responded, "I was going to scold you. But in light of what you've just said, I won't." Glenn Backes, director of the Sacramento office of the Drug Policy Alliance, a national lobbying organization that supports medicinal use of marijuana, said in an interview outside the courtroom that all the demonstrators at the courthouse Monday share Jones' dismay over the suspicious letters addressed to Nowinski and Damrell. "It overshadows the great things Judge Nowinski and Jeff Jones said," Backes said. "Two grown men willing to admit they made mistakes. That's always something I respect, especially in this time when people are really hard pressed to take responsibility." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom