Tracknum: 15738.20061020152325.sgho8377.aa03.charter.ne
Pubdate: Fri, 20 Oct 2006
Source: Santa Cruz Sentinel (CA)
Copyright: 2006 Santa Cruz Sentinel
Contact: http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/news/edit/form.htm
Website: http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/394
Author: Genevieve Bookwalter, Sentinel Staff Writer
Cited: The ruling, a 31 page .pdf file 
http://www.courtinfo.ca.gov/opinions/documents/H028783.PDF
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal)

MEDICAL MARIJUANA ADVOCATES GET VICTORY IN STATE APPEALS COURT

Medical marijuana advocates say this week's state appeals court 
ruling broadens the scope of who can legally sell marijuana and will 
make it easier for those who need the drug to get it.

California's 6th District Court of Appeal on Wednesday overturned the 
conviction of Roger Mentch. The Felton man found guilty last year of 
cultivation of marijuana and possession of the drug for sale because 
he was not considered a "caregiver."

Santa Cruz attorney Ben Rice said in the past, caregivers have had to 
prove they had regular contact with a patient and provided services 
beyond drug delivery. But now, "all you have to do is show some 
evidence of helping in some fashion with a person's health," Rice 
said. That help includes providing medical marijuana, and could apply 
to a distributor or collective.

California voters in 1996 approved Proposition 215, legalizing the 
use of marijuana for medicinal purposes and allowing designated 
"caregivers" to provide the drug. It is still illegal under federal law.

In the 31-page ruling, Justice Franklin Elia wrote that a jury should 
have been allowed to hear evidence that Mentch, who runs the 
Hemporium LLC, a caregiving service and pot collective in Felton, was 
a legal caregiver of the clients for whom he grew and delivered 
marijuana. That evidence was not permitted in court and Mentch was 
found guilty.

District Attorney Bob Lee, whose office prosecuted the case, did not 
return phone calls to comment.

Mentch's troubles began in 2003, when he was arrested after a bank 
teller reported his cash deposits consistently reeked of marijuana. 
He had started the business a year earlier after being laid off by 
his Silicon Valley employer.

When arrested, Mentch said he grew marijuana for himself and five 
other people, all of whom had medical marijuana prescriptions. His 
defense team wanted to argue that service defined him as a caregiver. 
The court, however, would not allow it.

Appellate court justices agreed with the defense.

Mentch, "by consistently growing and supplying physician-approved or 
prescribed medicinal marijuana ... was meeting an important health 
need of several medical marijuana patients," Elia wrote.

Ken Sampson, president of the Santa Cruz Patients Collective in Santa 
Cruz, said the ruling helped legitimize those who provide medical marijuana.

"We pay sales tax, we do everything by the book," said Sampson, whose 
collective sells medical marijuana in the Harvey West neighborhood.

While Santa Cruz has agreed that collective workers qualify as 
caregivers, Sampson said he hopes the ruling will give credence to 
those operating outside city limits.

"This new decision adds weight to that countywide," Sampson said. "It 
just legitimizes what we're doing here."