Pubdate: Wed, 14 Jul 2004 Source: News-Review, The (OR) Copyright: 2004 The News-Review Contact: http://www.newsreview.info Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2623 Author: John Sowell Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) TRIAL BEGINS FOR ATTACK ON MEDICAL MARIJUANA USER A sheriff's deputy testified Tuesday that he followed a trail of marijuana leaves from the scene of a brutal attack last year on a Tri City man to a home where several of the suspects in the case were later found. Deputy Jason Zanni said the attackers carried off a marijuana plant from the home of Craig Hobbs, the victim in the case. As they ran, the plant shed leaves and stems that investigators were able to use to track to another home, located around the corner about 100 yards from Hobbs' residence. The testimony came during the first day of the trial of Jeffry T. Lindenmeier, 19, of Myrtle Creek. He was charged with first- and second-degree robbery, conspiracy to commit robbery and second-degree assault in the March 21, 2003, attack on Hobbs. Altogether, three men and three boys -- all from Myrtle Creek -- were charged in the attack. The other five pleaded to lesser charges that resulted in their convictions on second-degree robbery in exchange for the other charges being dropped. Only Lindenmeier chose to go to trial. Cole D. Carter, then 18, who drove a car to the scene and back, and lookouts Shane R. Rinehart and Niclas W. Ware, both then 17, were placed on probation. Two other defendants, who like Lindenmeier, were accused of bursting into the house, were sentenced to prison. Buford T. Harper, then 16, was sentenced to nearly six years, while Joshua W. Lampton, then 19, was sentenced to nearly three years. Tom Bernier, the attorney representing Lindenmeier, told the jury his client was guilty of the assault, in which Hobbs was struck numerous times by a masked assailant wielding a baseball bat. Bernier said Lindenmeier denied involvement in the robbery or in any conspiracy. Hobbs was surfing the Internet on his computer in the early morning hours when the suspects broke through the locked door of his manufactured home. "The door flew open and I saw someone standing there with a mask. The next thing I knew, I got hit with the baseball bat," Hobbs told the jury of seven men and five women. "I got hit in the face. My glasses flew off and I couldn't see." Hobbs, who suffers from a degenerative back disorder, has a card that allows him to legally grow and use personal amounts of marijuana to ease his pain. The attackers stole three of the four plants he had growing in one of his bedrooms. He estimated they got away with three ounces of usable marijuana, worth between $800 and $1,200. The trial is expected to conclude today. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake