Pubdate: Sat, 07 Jun 2003 Source: Statesman Journal (OR) Copyright: 2003 Statesman Journal Contact: http://www.statesmanjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/427 Author: Susan Tom, Statesman Journal Cited: Voter Power http://www.voterpower.org/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) MEDICAL MARIJUANA ADVOCATE CONFIDENT AS TRIAL SET TO BEGIN Salem Man Was Arrested in 2002 After Plants Found. The trial of Robert Gray, a leader in Salem's medical marijuana movement, is set to begin Monday. Gray, founder and director of the Medical Cannabis Resource Center, or MERCY, is charged with manufacture, possession and distribution of a controlled substance. MERCY merged with Voter Power, the organization behind passage of the Oregon Medical Marijuana Act in 1998 and backer of a proposed expansion of the current law. The Marion Area Gang and Narcotics Enforcement Team found 37 marijuana plants and a large amount of dried marijuana at 1695 Fairgrounds Road NE, Salem, on March 8, 2002. District Attorney Dale Penn said Friday that the case has nothing to do with medical marijuana. "He may be a cardholder and a caregiver, but our position is the facts of this case goes outside the facts of any medical marijuana evidence," Penn said. Gray said he is within his rights as a medical marijuana cardholder and caregiver under the Oregon Medical Marijuana Act. "We're going to win and we're going to believe in the people," said Gray, 38. The law allows a cardholding patient or his designated caregiver as much as seven plants -- three mature and four immature --and as much as 7 ounces of dried marijuana. According to court documents, Gray said he was the caregiver for five cardholders other than himself. State law allows a caregiver to have multiple patients. Gray's trial comes at a time when the Bush administration is cracking down on states with laws allowing medical marijuana . Federal law prohibits the manufacture and delivery of marijuana. Oregon is one of nine states that allows medical use of marijuana, but patients in all states except California must grow their own or get it as a donation. States with medical marijuana laws have been the focus of increased scrutiny by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and Attorney General John Ashcroft. A federal bill that targets states allowing medical marijuana use is pending. It would shift $11 million from state and local police to the federal government to fight drugs in high trafficking areas such as Marion County. Penn said law enforcement always has been concerned about those who use the medical marijuana law as a shield for illegal drug activities. In Oregon, while some medical marijuana advocates are pushing to expand the existing law, others are worried about protecting hard-won gains. About 4,500 Oregonians are registered medical marijuana patients. House Bill 2939, written to avert potential problems with the federal government by tightening the state's medical marijuana law, will likely die in the Senate. Dr. Grant Higginson, state health officer, said the bill would have put restrictions on cardholding patients with criminal pasts. He said a work group is being formed to craft revisions to the law for the next session. Wendell Basye, assistant director of MERCY, said the classification of marijuana with other Schedule 1 drugs such as heroin and methamphetamine out of line. He called Gray's trial the epitome of a "witch hunt" mentality of overzealous law enforcement. Stormy Ray, the grandmother who helped get Oregon's Medical Marijuana Act on the books, said she's found law enforcement to be supportive of the law. She sees a growing divide among what has become three sides of the issues; patients, advocates pushing for legalization, and the federal government. "We try to take patients out of the middle with education," said Ray, who heads a foundation to educate and assist patients, law enforcement, and others in the community about Oregon's law. "That situation wouldn't exist if patients had medicine," she said. "Those people don't have any place to go." Meanwhile, Gray said he wants to stage a smokeout by medical marijuana patients Monday in front of the Marion County Courthouse. He also intends to sue Marion County after his trial. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake