Pubdate: Sat, 14 Aug 2004 Source: News-Review, The (OR) Copyright: 2004 The News-Review Contact: http://www.newsreview.info Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2623 Author: Christian Bringhurst Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) MYRTLE CREEK ROBBER TO SERVE NEARLY 8 YEARS A Myrtle Creek man was sentenced to nearly eight years in prison Friday for breaking into the home of a Tri City man, beating him and stealing his medical marijuana. A jury convicted Jeffry T. Lindenmeier, 19, of first- and second-degree robbery, conspiracy to commit robbery, and second-degree assault on July 14 after a two-day trial. In addition to the 90-month sentence, Lindenmeier will be subject to three years of post-prison supervision. Lindenmeier and five others broke into the victim's mobile home in the early morning hours of March 21, 2003, while the man was surfing the Internet on his home computer. Lindenmeier beat the man several times in the head with a baseball bat, then he and the others ran away with three of the medical marijuana plants the victim used to treat a degenerative back condition, according to police. Douglas County sheriff's deputies followed a trail of marijuana leaves to a nearby home, and the teenagers were arrested during the subsequent investigation. Although one of the other defendants, 18-year-old Buford Thomas Harper, was initially willing to wield the bat, Lindenmeier allegedly took it because he and the others were afraid Harper might be too rough with the victim. As it was, the victim received several stitches to his face after the attack, and his wife was slightly injured while trying to help him, according to police. Harper, who was 16 at the time of the robbery, was sentenced to 70 months in prison. Twenty-year-old Joshua W. Lampton, who was almost 19 at the time, received 34 months in prison. The other defendants -- 18-year-old Shane R. Rinehart, 18-year-old Niclas W. Ware, and 19-year-old Cole D. Carter -- each received three years probation. When given a chance to speak, the only thing Lindenmeier had to say was, "I'd like to ask the court If I could report to you maybe in a month, so I can spend my 20th birthday with my family." Although Deputy District Attorney Deb Stoll objected to the request, Judge William Lasswell gave Lindenmeier until Sept. 8 -- two days after his birthday -- to report to the Douglas County Jail. "As a general rule we don't do that," Lasswell said. "A couple of times I've gotten burned." He expressed confidence, however, that Lindenmeier would show up as promised. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake