Pubdate: Fri, 23 Sep 2005 Source: Lahontan Valley News (NV) Copyright: 2005 lahontanvalleynews.com Contact: http://www.lahontanvalleynews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/misc?url=/misc/letter/index.pbs Website: http://www.lahontanvalleynews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/frontpage Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3456 Author: Marlene Garcia FORMER CANDIDATE FOR STATE SENATE WILL STAND TRIAL ON MARIJUANA CHARGES A former candidate for the Nevada State Senate will stand trial on allegations he sold 11.7 ounces of marijuana to an informant working with police in 2003, a judge ruled Thursday. Justice of the Peace Dan Ward told John K. O'Connor to appear in district count on Tuesday to enter a plea to sales of a controlled substance. Ward found there was enough evidence presented at a preliminary hearing to send the case to trial. O'Connor, who unsuccessfully ran against Sen. Mike McGinness, R-Fallon, last year for a senate seat, is accused of selling the marijuana for $80 to a woman working with the North Central Narcotics Task Force in December 2003. The informant and two task force officers testified about the case. Jared Jones, a Churchill County Sheriff's Department deputy who was the lead task force investigator on the case, said the confidential informant approached authorities with information about O'Connor selling drugs. The task force set up a "buy" where the woman purchased marijuana from O'Connor at his McKay Court home. "We had no interest in Mr. O'Connor until the informant came forward," Jones testified. Courtney Morris testified she bought the marijuana after calling O'Connor at his home on Dec. 5, 2003. She said the defendant had an ice chest with four baggies of marijuana at his residence, and she was given the choice of which bag to purchase. "I chose the one that was the largest," she said. Morris said she worked for the task force for about two years and was sometimes paid for her information, but didn't receive money in the O'Connor case. She also said she had a "purely sexual" relationship with O'Connor about seven years ago. Defense attorney Jim Sloan asked investigator Jones why O'Connor was not charged with any crime until almost six months after the alleged marijuana buy and was a candidate for state office. Sloan also questioned why authorities did not serve a search warrant to recover the rest of the marijuana reportedly in the house and to recoup the $80 the task force had given to Morris to make the buy. "We often do not file a case right away because we don't want to burn the (confidential informant)," Jones said. Shortly after his arrest, O'Connor said his only affiliation with marijuana was under a medical marijuana program. He said he became involved in the medicinal use of marijuana because of his father, who suffers from severe arthritis and uses the drug to ease his pain. - --- MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman