Pubdate: Thu, 1 Jan 2004 Source: Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO) Copyright: 2004, Denver Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.rockymountainnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/371 Author: Ellen Miller Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/don+nord POT SMOKER WANTS AGENTS TO BE CITED Feds Have Defied Judge's Order To Return Marijuana To Ill Man A Hayden man whose medical marijuana was seized in a raid by local and federal drug agents asked a judge Wednesday to find the officers in contempt for refusing to return the plants. Earlier in December, a Routt County judge ordered the drug task force to return 2 ounces of the marijuana by Monday. The man's attorney filed for a contempt citation Wednesday. Don Nord, 57, is disabled by a work injury and ill with cancer, diabetes and other maladies. He is registered with the state medical marijuana program, entitling him to keep marijuana, under state law. Federal law makes no such allowance for marijuana, and the Drug Enforcement Administration remains adamant that it will not return Nord's pot. "Under federal law, marijuana is contraband, and by policy, we destroy contraband," said U.S. attorney's spokesman Dick Weatherbee. DEA spokesman Bill Grant said the agency isn't bound by the order of Routt County Judge James Garrecht. "Federal law supersedes state law, and the federal government does not recognize the medicinal use of marijuana," he said. But Kris Hammond, Nord's attorney, said denying a sick man medication OK'd by a doctor is "ridiculous. This has got to be stopped. Sick, old people are being denied their medication, and he's a totally harmless guy." Nord, who also has lung disease and needs supplemental oxygen, lives on $642 a month in a small apartment and relies on friends to help him cover the cost of prescription drugs - some of which he wouldn't have to take if he could resume marijuana use. A former maintenance worker, Nord was injured in a fall on the job and was disabled in 1985. "The only thing that relaxes me so I can sleep is marijuana, and it's better for pain, too," he said. "The reason I started this whole thing about returning it is so it doesn't happen to anybody else." Police raided Nord's apartment Oct. 14, seizing three marijuana plants, growing equipment and pipes. Nord was ticketed for misdemeanor drug possession, but the charges were dropped. The government said it lost its copy of the ticket. Hammond then persuaded the judge to order the DEA to return Nord's growing equipment, pipes and 2 ounces of marijuana. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin