Pubdate: Mon, 11 Feb 2008
Source: Los Angeles Business Journal (CA)
Copyright: 2008 Los Angeles Business Journal Associates
Contact: http://www.labusinessjournal.com/contact.asp
Website: http://www.labusinessjournal.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4405
Author: Deborah Crowe, Los Angeles Business Journal Staff
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/dispensaries
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/af.htm (Asset Forfeiture)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal)

Buzz Killed

L.A. POT SHOPS SEE BUDDING SUCCESS GO UP IN SMOKE

Los Angeles has become the unofficial capital of storefront shops that
sell marijuana in recent years, and so many have sprouted that no one
knows exactly how many exist.

But those freewheeling times are skidding to a halt.

The City Council has imposed a moratorium on any new pot shops and is
moving to regulate the existing ones. Users are feeling a chill, too,
from a recent court ruling that allows California employers to fire
pot smokers -- even if the marijuana is used at home and purchased
under state law.

But even worse for marijuana shop owners, the U.S. Drug Enforcement
Administration, which has conducted raids of medical marijuana
dispensaries, recently began sending letters to some shop landlords
telling them that their property could be confiscated because it is
being used for illegal activity, at least under federal law. The DEA
has never recognized California's so-called compassionate use
legislation and considers marijuana dispensaries as little more than
drug dealers.

"It's tough for all of us who have been trying to run a reputable
business that helped a lot of sick people get their medicine," said
Michael Leavitt, who shut his Canoga Park dispensary last summer.

His landlord had received a letter from the DEA, pointing out that his
property could be seized under the Civil Asset Forfeiture Reform Act
of 2000.

"For the price of a postage stamp, they closed me up," said Leavitt,
who had never been raided and is himself a patient who uses medical
marijuana to alleviate symptoms of several chronic diseases.

Leavitt's former landlord, Miguel Fernandez, said he initially was
leery of renting to a pot dispensary, but said Leavitt turned out to
be a model tenant.

"I still have not been able to rent his space to someone as good,"
said Fernandez, adding that it was Leavitt's decision to liquidate his
business rather than call the DEA's bluff.

Los Angeles attorney William Kroger, who has seen a few of his roughly
20 dispensary clients similarly affected, said that in the current
atmosphere, Leavitt probably made the right choice.

While even the DEA doesn't have an exact figure on how many operations
were shut down due to the letter campaign, advocate groups know of
several cases throughout the city, with some dispensaries raided even
after they informed DEA agents that they were closing.

"And what we've seen is that even when you fight back, you get raided
anyway and lose everything," said Kroger, who served on the advisory
task force that drafted the interim ordinance now regulating the
dispensaries. "You have to keep in mind, given the conflict between
the federal and state law, and the inclination of the current (U.S.)
administration, the DEA is just doing its job." 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake