Pubdate: Fri, 13 Feb 2004 Source: Daily Review, The (Hayward, CA) Copyright: 2004sANG Newspapers Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1410 Website: http://www.dailyreviewonline.com/ . Author: Michelle Meyers, STAFF WRITER HAYWARD DISPENSARY VANDALIZED A downtown medical marijuana dispensary was vandalized in two separate incidents exactly one week apart at the same time and in the same way, police said. Someone threw two distinctive landscaping bricks through the front window of Hayward Patients' Resource Center (HPRC) about 2:30 a.m. on Feb. 4 and at 4 a.m. on Wednesday, said Hayward police Lt. Gary Branson. No one attempted to enter the building, located on Foothill Boulevard between A and B streets, but the broken glass set off an alarm, he said. Police have no suspects in either incident, he said. Branson added that it's unusual for the same place to be vandalized in the same way at the same time. "It looks like they're being targeted," he said. HPRC owner Jane Weirick also believes her business was targeted. Since nobody broke into the building, she suspects it was someone who doesn't want to see her dispensary thrive, someone who wants her to have more costs and police calls, Weirick said. It cost $3,000 to replace the broken windows, she said. Weirick's is one of three known medical marijuana dispensaries operating within a couple of blocks of one another on Foothill Boulevard. They had been operating against the city's zoning law, but the City Council recently grandfathered them in after a long public debate. The Hayward Hempery's Hayward Patient Group and Local Patients Cooperative are allowed to operate under certain conditions for three years. HPRC, the newest of the three, can operate for just one year. If one of the others closes, HPRC can stay open for three years. The status of The Hempery might be in limbo. It appears to have been closed for a least a week. Owner Cheryl Adams didn't return phone messages left Wednesday and Thursday on her personal line, and numbers for her business have been disconnected. Ron Ikebe, owner of The Hempery's building, said the business is open as far as he knows. Adams was almost evicted from the building last month because she was behind on rent. But a man, who has asked to remain anonymous, came to her rescue, loaned her $12,000 and became a business partner to help keep the dispensary open, he said. The man said that things at The Hempery were going well until one day, without warning, Adams changed the locks. He hasn't been able to get in or heard from Adams since, he said. "I jumped into it so quick. I wanted to help," he said, "But I should have looked into the situation more thoroughly." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake