Pubdate: Thu, 27 Oct 2005 Source: San Mateo County Times, The (CA) Contact: 2005 ANG Newspapers Website: http://www.sanmateocountytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/392 Author: Rebekah Gordon, Staff Writer Cited: Safe Access Now http://safeaccessnow.net/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) COUNTY PROSECUTES POT CLUB Belmont Dispensary Violated Proposition 215 Guidelines for Growing Medical Marijuana, Deputy District Attorney Says ROB SIMMONS said he ran a medical marijuana dispensary out of his home here for more than eight years to help the ailing feel better. But today in court, the District Attorney will challenge that notion, presenting evidence in a preliminary hearing to potentially charge Simmons with two felonies for possession of marijuana for the purposes of sale, and planting and cultivating marijuana illegally. On May 3, the San Mateo County Narcotics Task Force seized 59 plants from his apartment on Continentals Way, Cmdr. Mark Wyss said. They allowed him to keep 12. Simmons said what was taken constituted 1 to 3 pounds of usable drug. One pound of marijuana can be used for about 450 rolled cigarettes. "The government is trying to put people in jail that want to feel better," Simmons said. "It just doesn't make any sense." Not a Caregiver To Deputy District Attorney Peter Lynch, it makes perfect sense. "Medical marijuana does not apply in this case," Lynch said. "He wasn't complying with the framework set up by the medical marijuana statute." Under Prop. 215 passed by voters in 1996, qualified patients or their primary caregiver can grow and possess marijuana for medicinal use. State guidelines issued in January 2004 set the acceptable amount at six mature or 12 immature plants and 8 ounces of marijuana, except where a doctor or local governments authorize more; San Mateo County hasn't. Furthermore, the Board of Supervisors hasn't established guidelines for dispensaries, leaving it to local jurisdictions. As a result, there's no rule of law to follow other than that for caregivers under Prop. 215. "We don't believe there's any way he could claim to be the primary caregiver," Lynch said. "He's fairly vociferous in his claim in being able to do this," Lynch added. "It doesn't matter. That's not what the law says." In His Defense Simmons said he is allowed to have the plants and has two doctor's notes prescribing marijuana for a range of medical problems. He described the drug as the "safest, most effective medicine I've found on this planet." He also said he has closely followed the spirit of state medicinal marijuana laws in running his dispensary. Earlier this year, Simmons was filmed selling marijuana to an undercover reporter in an investigative series on KTVU-TV Channel 2. The news segment explored the ease with which patients could obtain doctor's notes for medicinal marijuana and make subsequent purchases. His face was blurred in the broadcast, but it was nonetheless a boon for his cause, he said. Many people figured out who he was but did not understand that the undercover reporter had a medical note, which he checked, he said. "I've been really good with my intake procedures, making sure everyone's a qualified patient," he said. Chris Conrad, the president of the El Cerrito-based marijuana advocacy group Safe Access Now and a court-qualified marijuana expert, said the absence of dispensary laws may help Simmons. Those who run dispensaries have been qualified as caregivers in other cases when they've provided services beyond selling marijuana, such as counseling or delivery, Conrad said. Simmons said he regularly made deliveries. "The idea of not having a policy creates more of an opportunity to have a legal defense," Conrad said. A Storied Past Simmons, 26, was the first patient of his dispensary, called the Cal Medical MJ Patients Association, but over time he said he served hundreds. His was the only one in the county. "Patients have been drastically neglected in this area," he said. "This is probably the worst county for a medical marijuana patient to live in in the whole state." He said he has had medical problems his entire life, including seizures, osteoarthritis, migraines, ulcers, and chronic pain from two injury-related hip operations when he was a teenager. His dealings have left him occasionally homeless, and he has been evicted at least five times. Broke and evicted again after the May raid, he is now living in a Belmont motel with his father. This is not the first time Simmons has had trouble with the law, his real estate sales license, issued in 1998, will be revoked by the California Department of Real Estate on Nov. 18. Court records show their decision is based on a July 2003 conviction of trespass and resisting arrest in Santa Clara County, a conviction of trespass in March 2000 at the Carlmont Shopping Center, and an Oct 1998 conviction for marijuana possession. Enthralled, With a Cause Travis Svensson, a psychiatrist, addiction specialist and assistant clinical professor at the University of California in San Francisco, has treated Simmons intermittently for the last four or five years. Simmons has solicited doctor's notes from many providers, Svensson said, including him. "I've never known him not to present (himself) under the influence of marijuana," Svensson said. "He's been a young man who loves his marijuana and will do anything to continue to maintain an uninterrupted supply of marijuana for himself." But a 26-year-old San Mateo resident and long-time patron of Simmons' dispensary, who wished to remain anonymous for fear of others knowing about his marijuana treatment for stress, anxiety and arthritis, said that Simmons' focus has always been in the right place. "He's just all about the patient. Rob wasn't even looking at it for the money," the patron said. "He continues to keep pushing for what he believes in. You've got to give him a hands up for that." Simmons has pleaded with the county to make local laws favorable to medicinal marijuana patients and dispensaries, contacting John Conley, the county's Deputy Public Health Director, the Board of Supervisors and the Belmont City Council. "Sick people have the right to feel better," Simmons said. "I don't think it's fair what they're doing to me." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake