Pubdate: Sat, 3 May 2008 Source: San Diego Union Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2008 Union-Tribune Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.uniontrib.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/386 Note: Seldom prints LTEs from outside it's circulation area. Author: Sherry Saavedra, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?228 (Paraphernalia) GROUP: ENFORCE POT-PARAPHERNALIA BAN City Is Focusing on Sale of Pipes for Meth, Crack COLLEGE AREA - College Area residents are going after smoke shops near San Diego State University, demanding that city officials ban the businesses from selling bongs and other marijuana paraphernalia, from stash kits to scales. The College Area Community Council has sent letters to Councilman Jim Madaffer and Mayor Jerry Sanders requesting that they enforce two state health and safety codes that together make it a misdemeanor to sell the paraphernalia at seven shops along El Cajon Boulevard and University Avenue. Just before Thanksgiving, City Attorney Michael Aguirre sent cease-and-desist notices to 52 smoke shops citywide. The letters instructed the shops to stop selling drug paraphernalia or face consequences for the misdemeanor, which include up to six months in custody and a $1,000 fine for each violation, plus possible civil prosecution. But Deputy City Attorney Makini Hammond said the office is targeting paraphernalia for crack and methamphetamine use, not for marijuana, at this time. Members of the College Area Community Council and community groups elsewhere believe the city isn't fully enforcing the law. "Clearly, under the code as we read it, bongs are not allowed," said Doug Case, president of the community council. "The reality is that the city attorney doesn't think it's politically popular to prosecute smoke shops for marijuana paraphernalia." Case said residents support "high-quality retail businesses" in the neighborhoods surrounding San Diego State University and a revitalization of El Cajon Boulevard. Smoke shops don't contribute to a "family-oriented community," he said. Hammond doesn't dispute that selling marijuana paraphernalia is against the law, but getting a conviction is another matter. "We've primarily been targeting meth and rock-cocaine pipes because those are the things we believed we would be successful in prosecuting," she said. "The problem with going after marijuana pipes is . . . there's always the defense that the stuff is being used for tobacco purposes." Hammond said another factor is a lack of adequate police and prosecutorial staffing. "We have limited resources," Hammond said. "Should we use them going after smoke shops and marijuana bongs or drug houses? What does the community want us to do?" But Hammond said her office hasn't given up on this issue and is looking for other legal means to more effectively combat it. The city's highest concentrations of smoke shops are in and near the College Area and Pacific Beach - neighborhoods with large numbers of college students. Recently, the Pacific Beach Town Council and Pacific Beach Planning Group sent letters to city officials demanding enforcement there as well. "We've known for a while that these shops existed, but we didn't realize how many of them there were, and we didn't realize that the drug paraphernalia they're selling is actually illegal to sell and the police could enforce it," said Marcie Beckett, a board member of both Pacific Beach groups. "We think the city is not doing its job of enforcing the law. . . . They should at least try." Such shops glamorize drug use, Beckett said. Managers and clerks at smoke shops along El Cajon Boulevard said they sell the controversial items for tobacco, not drug, use. At Puff N Stuff Smoke Shop, a sign above a display of water pipes warns customers not to refer to the items as bongs or they will be asked to leave. Bongs are water pipes favored by some who smoke marijuana. On the same street, Up in Smoke sells a colorful array of water pipes ranging from about $25 to $1,000, as well as other glass pipes. Some are custom-made with figurines. "We're more of a high-end glass shop," manager Ryan James said, adding that the inventory is aimed at smoking tobacco in a healthier manner. "Going after us because somebody used stuff we had for drugs is kind of like going after Wal-Mart because somebody bought a steak knife there and used it to stab somebody," he said. Despite James' assertion that the products aren't drug-related, a T-shirt on one sales rack displays a marijuana leaf. Also for sale are faux soda cans used for concealing items - cash, says James; contraband, say critics. James said the shop used to sell oil burners but got rid of those in response to Aguirre's letter. The store then removed the scales and "jewelry bags" at the request of undercover police who visited the store in December, James said. "They said the jewelry bags and postal scales couldn't be used for anything else but drugs," he said. Makini said the Drug Abatement Response Team, a multiagency task force that she's a part of, has been trying to rid businesses of drug paraphernalia since 1995, when such items primarily sold by mom-and-pop stores. Today, the items are sold by smoke shops under the guise of selling tobacco, she said, adding that there's a huge profit involved. After Aguirre's letters, undercover law enforcement hit 12 businesses in December suspected of selling meth-and rock-smoking pipes such as oil burners, resulting in charges against owners and clerks at two stores. Going after crack and meth paraphernalia, but not those for marijuana, isn't a political issue, Hammond said, but public sentiment plays a role. "The attitude toward rock cocaine and methamphetamine is that it destroys people's lives, but people are more accepting of marijuana," she said. "I'm not saying that's right. I'm just saying that's the reality. . . . We need to work on changing the public perception if we want to go after marijuana bongs." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake