Pubdate: Tue, 03 Feb 2004 Source: Las Vegas City Life (NV) Copyright: 2004sLas Vegas City Life Contact: http://www.lasvegascitylife.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1653 Author: Mike Zigler, CityLife staff writer. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) BLUNT REALITY: PIERRE WERNER'S MEDICAL MARIJUANA OPERATION BUSTED BY POLICE The High Priest Of Pot Has Some Praying To Do After Police Confiscated His Medical Marijuana Plants Jan. 17. Looking in from the outside of Pierre Werner's home, you can tell something went terribly wrong. Two sheetless mattresses rested in the front bedroom near a gaping hole in the wall. Particleboard sheltered the dining room windows and glass scattered the lawn. Framed pictures and mini-blinds were destroyed. Clothes, furniture and loose change were spread in unorthodox fashion throughout the house. And a huge dent, clearly from a vehicular impact, decorated the garage door. The high priest of pot, who is intent on establishing Nevada's first cannabis club, certainly has some smoke to clear. On Jan. 17, Werner's house was raided. Since then, he's been under psychiatric evaluation and lockdown twice. According to Metro, several neighbors called police to Werner's residence at 1836 Niblick Circle, after he stood outside waving around a marijuana plant at 7 a.m. One neighbor phoned police, saying Werner, 42, hit his parked car and then fled the scene -- only to eventually park in his own driveway a couple houses away. "Our units show up, see the marijuana plant and feel there was possibility that [Werner] was harvesting marijuana," said Jose Montoya, spokesman for Metro. Once narcotics detectives arrived on the scene, Montoya said they requested that Werner -- who is bipolar -- receive medical evaluation because "he was acting funny." "Police put him in custody and he was inside the patrol car kicking the windows and interior of the car," Montoya continued. Narcotics detectives took over the investigation and received a warrant to go inside the residence, Montoya said. Detectives compiled a property report of seized items, which included marijuana, paraphernalia used to grow marijuana, plastic baggies and miscellaneous paperwork. Under state law, a patient can have up to seven marijuana plants. "A patient can have four immature plants, three mature plants and an ounce of smokeable marijuana under Nevada law," explained Jennifer Bartlett, program manager of Nevada's Medical Marijuana Program. A mature plant by the state's definition is one with buds that can be seen with the naked eye, Bartlett added. Due to the investigation's ongoing status, Sgt. Dave Schvaneveldt of Metro's narcotics unit would not comment on how much marijuana was confiscated or disclose what charges Werner faces. Montoya, however, indicated that Werner would likely be charged with trafficking or illegal manufacturing of marijuana. As of deadline, he had not been formally charged. Werner was released from UMC Jan. 22, but was committed to Southern Nevada Adult Mental Health Services the following day, after a family disturbance at a relative's home. Montoya said a family member was concerned when Werner kept referencing Adolf Hitler and former druglord Pablo Escobar. During a phone interview Jan. 26, Werner admitted he was growing too much medical marijuana. He estimated that police confiscated 20 to 30 plants. He then detailed his adventures since Jan. 17. A registered patient in the Department of Agriculture's medical marijuana program, Werner said his neighbors knew of his status and had no right to call the police. "I can flash seven plants of marijuana in front of my neighbors and police, and they're not supposed to do a thing about it; I only flashed one," Werner said. "It's legal for me and I want to make sure everyone respects it. I got nothing to hide." As for hitting his neighbor's car, Werner suspected his neighbors had tampered with his car in the past. According to Werner, he "just gently touched her car. I didn't bang it up hardcore or anything, because I didn't want to fuck up my car either." While in psychiatric isolation at the Clark County Detention Center, Werner said he rammed his head against the wall in order to be transported to UMC. It was there Werner talked to doctors and "was found sane then released," he said, adding that would not have been the case at jail. Werner walked from UMC to his home on Jan. 22, where a relative picked him up for breakfast the following morning. When the relative dropped him off at a cousin's house, the relative phoned police in order to have him recommitted, Werner said. "[The relative] doesn't believe in medical marijuana, and thinks I'm a nutcase for doing what I do," Werner said. Werner consults and provides for medical marijuana patients. Ever since voters approved medical marijuana use in 2000, Werner has sought to follow the lead of California's cannabis clubs. He started Primary Caregivers and Consultants in 2001, as a way for Nevada patients to safely access a legal medicine that the state doesn't provide. Werner's referral service is the only one in Nevada that offers physician-approved recommendations for medical marijuana use. The Department of Agriculture issues licenses to use medical marijuana, allowing patients to possess up to one ounce and grow their own. Werner believed regulation of the program is easy to manipulate because it is confidential and oversight is limited. This might lead patients to forge a doctor's signature to gain entry into the program, Werner said. To counter this, his business referred qualified patients to doctors -- unofficially regulating the program. Werner said that anticipated narcotic-related charges and a possible lockdown in a psychiatric center are not enough to stop his business. "It's all part of the master plan," Werner said. "If they can't stop me through this, I can open up a compassion club and the law can't do a thing about it." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom