Pubdate: Wed, 10 Dec 2008 Source: District Weekly (Long Beach, CA) Copyright: 2008 Seven Days Publishing LLC. Contact: http://thedistrictweekly.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4687 Author: Greggory Moore KEEP OFF THE GRASS Medical marijuana is not illegal in California, but the DEA continues to raid dispensaries in Long Beach. We ask the obvious question: Why? It's just before noon on a sunny day in early October, and a young man in a Dodgers T-shirt skateboards up one of the funky East Village sidewalks of downtown Long Beach to 745 E. Fourth Street, picks up his board and enters Unit E. Inside the small vestibule, he greets the guys behind the counter and presents documents confirming that a doctor has diagnosed him with a medical condition with symptoms alleviated by the use of marijuana. He takes a seat to wait. He doesn't know his arrival has been watched. But any second now, he will. Outside, Special Agent Patrick L. Kelly of the United States Drug Enforcement Administration has been observing Unit E-identified by its small sign as Long Beach Holistic, one of the many dispensaries of medical marijuana that have operated legally in California since voters approved the Compassionate Use Act in 1996. Kelly has been here at least once before: He surveilled Long Beach Holistic two weeks ago. Today, however, he has lots of company. As the young man with the skateboard waits for his paperwork to be validated, a dozen DEA agents-sporting helmets, bulletproof vests and guns-pour through the dispensary's unlocked door. Next, the barrel of an assault rifle is pointed directly at the Dodgers insignia on his T-shirt-which is to say, straight at his heart. Then, even after he is handcuffed and reseated, a pistol is trained in his general direction. Meanwhile, the rest of the invasion team makes its way into an antechamber, demanding entry into the dispensary proper. Before the staff can comply, one agent begins to pry open the door with a silver crowbar, and another pounds with a handheld battering ram. They operate deliberately, not hurrying, but quite determinedly. Inside, agents point their firearms in all directions. With the area secured-which takes little effort, considering the staff is three unarmed and scared young men-a curious ritual ensues: A female agent surveys the premises, and whenever she spots a security camera, she points it out to her crowbar-wielding teammate, who smashes it. He swings at one and kills it, then another, a third, a fourth. Nonetheless, everything I've just described is caught on video. Isn't it great to live in a state that cares enough about the sick that it permits people with conditions like HIV, multiple sclerosis, glaucoma and cancer to get and use the medicine they need-specifically, when that the medicine is marijuana? This is what the voters of California allowed for in 1996, when they approved the Compassionate Use Act. But doesn't it suck to live in a country so hardhearted it will spend millions of dollars to prevent sick people from getting medical marijuana, actively opposing the will of the voters in over a dozen states? That's what the DEA has done in perhaps 150 raids throughout California alone since 2000-the year George W. Bush became president of the United States. The Oct. 8 raid on Long Beach Holistic wasn't the first such DEA strike in Long Beach. For example, in November 2007 federal agents invaded Long Beach Compassionate Cooperative, seizing 33 kilograms of marijuana and about $10,000 cash. The raid on Long Beach Holistic wasn't even the only Long Beach operation by the DEA on Oct. 8; agents also swept through a medpot dispensary called HHA, a block away at 834 E. Fourth Street. One question: Why? Twelve years after California voters' approval of the Compassionate Use Act-a move supported by the New England Journal of Medicine, Kaiser Permanente, the American Bar Association, the Lymphoma Foundation of America, the American Academy of Family Physicians and former DEA Chief Administrative Law Judge Francis L. Young-the federal government continues to categorize cannabis as a Schedule I drug-that is, illegal for all purposes, in the same category as PCP. More aggressively than ever, U.S. agents are enforcing federal law at the expense of the state law approved by California voters. Follow-up question: Why? "The Compassionate Use Act is not a model of clarity," says Long Beach Assistant City Attorney Mike Mais with a hint of a chuckle-not because he doesn't take these questions seriously, but because, well, it's a dozen years later, and his office still isn't sure how to advise city officials. Mais refers me to an 11-page interpretation of the Compassionate Use Act recently issued by California Attorney General Jerry Brown, but notes that these are guidelines and not directives. And they certainly don't clear up everything. For example, Brown writes: "'storefront' dispensaries, as such, are not recognized under the law." A few lines later, however, Brown suggests that "a properly organized and operated collective [which, he notes, California law does not define] or cooperative that dispenses medical marijuana through a storefront may be lawful." Mais says the current general opinion of the Long Beach City Attorney's office is that no storefront dispensaries operating in Long Beach are in compliance with Brown's guidelines. But he's quick to point out that his office has not investigated the matter at all and has no firsthand information on the operations' legality. Meanwhile, Mais says, the office is taking a "wait-and-see" approach, watching how various pertinent lawsuits play out in cities around the state. Off the record, one city official tells me that this "wait-and-see" position is largely motivated by the city's financial problems: Long Beach simply cannot afford to expose itself to liability for taking a hard line on dispensaries. Another city official offers a different hypothesis: "There's a lot of compassion in Long Beach." Last summer, a few months before the DEA raids on Fourth Street, an article in the East Village News reported on the "hot topic" of conversation at the July meeting of the East Village Association: a medpot dispensary, unnamed in the story, though it later turned out to be a little business called Long Beach Holistic. I'd never been to such a place-never heard of this one-but it was clear from the little newsletter's benign account of the discussion that the intent was to run it out of town. The story included comments from Nuisance Abatement Officer Rita Hooker of the Long Beach Police Department, who supposedly told the group the DEA was already involved in the situation. The information about the DEA was, as it happens, true, but the comments from Hooker weren't: I learned later that she wasn't even at the meeting. Meanwhile, I went looking for Long Beach Holistic, and the first thing I discovered is that these places can be pretty inconspicuous. It was supposed to be on the 400 block of Olive, but I just couldn't find it. Finally, after going door to door, I came across one bearing a small sign, which simply read: "Long Beach Holistic," with the hours of operation. I didn't smell pot. I didn't see customers. When I walked into a tiny lobby area, there were two empty chairs and two men sitting in a little office behind a plate of glass, like ticket-sellers at the cinema. They made a call inside, and a minute later I was greeted by a soft-spoken young man in a muscle tee and fedora: the manager. I'll call him "Bob," because of the next thing I learned about medpot dispensaries-hardly anybody wants to talk on the record about them. It was members-only inside, so Bob suggested taking a walk to the corner. He didn't want to talk directly in front of LBH because of problems with the dispensary's next-door neighbor, who Bob said had been harassing him and several patients. I brought up the East Village News article, reciting its allegations about a "rising occurrence of neighborhood nuisance," that "the quality of life has been going down," that there are "parking problems," about "'stoned people' showing up at [neighborhood] front doors!" Bob copped to the last claim, attributing it to the original lack of signage at LBH, explaining that they had been trying to keep a low profile. Consequently, the occasional patient had knocked on the wrong door. So, up went a sign. There wasn't much to say about the parking claim, because, well, it's the East Village. And Bob flatly denied the quality-of-life stuff. He said half the reason the place opened was to help the community-and not just patients. He noted that LBH donates to the Long Beach Rescue Mission every Thursday. Bob was surprised to learn of the Long Beach Holistic discussion during the East Village Association meeting; he said no one had approached him or his landlord about solving any perceived problems. In fact, when I contacted the landlord-who didn't want his name used, either-he told me Long Beach Holistic has been "an excellent tenant [ . . . ] very low-profile." He said there'd been no negative feedback from city officials or the police, only from the next-door neighbor . . . oh, and also from the DEA, which the landlord said has suggested he is harboring an illegal business and liable to lose the entire building. When Long Beach Holistic's lease expires in April, he likely won't be renewing it, he says-too much of a hassle-in which case he says the DEA has promised to leave Long Beach Holistic alone. Larry Bott lived next door to Long Beach Holistic, and he's open about his crusade to get the medpot business gone. He acknowledges he called all over town trying to get city officials and police to do something. He passed out fliers with instructions about how to contact the DEA-including a notation that the agency bases its decision to take down dispensaries on the number of complaints it receives. Yet Bott speaks of having voted for the Compassionate Use Act-"Whatever it is that makes you not hurt is fine," he says-and even of his support for the out-and-out legalization of marijuana. He says he doesn't think the dispensary operators are bad people. His anger is directed toward Long Beach city officials. "The city is just plain chicken," he said a few weeks prior to the Oct. 8 raid. Afterward, he echoes the same sentiment. "We got no help from Bonnie Lowenthal," Bott says, referring to the former First District council member, whose district was home to LBH. He adds: "Even though I consider her a friend." Bott's opposition to Long Beach Holistic, then, is motivated perhaps by a not-in-my-backyard philosophy. Although Sgt. Paul LeBaron, an LBPD drug investigator, says there were many complaints about the dispensary, more than half of them were anonymous-and thus could have been repeats-and few were verified. Bott acknowledges he was a repeat complainer. East Village Association President Phil Appleby, who confesses to contacting the DEA as early as last July, estimates that the number of people who complained to the EVA totals six. But the 33-page search warrant/affidavit served on Long Beach Holistic at the time of the Oct. 8 raid by the DEA records only three complaints against the medpot dispensary-one on July 22 from "a representative of the East Village Association," and two more on Sept. 18, one anonymously and the other from another EVA member. Does this equal a problem? And, if so, does the problem demand a solution like an armed raid? I made a few phone calls, trying to find out. Then I made a few more. And a few more still. For weeks, I left messages for a variety of agents from the Drug Enforcement Administration. None of my calls were returned. Finally, after my third message to Special Agent Deanne Reuter went unanswered, I tried an experiment. Instead of identifying myself as a journalist seeking answers, I called from a different telephone number and announced that a medpot dispensary had opened in my neighborhood, and I wanted to find out what could be done. In less than 24 hours, Reuter called me back. A few days later, she phoned again. Meanwhile, I pored over the affidavit and the long list of what U.S. Magistrate Judge Patrick J. Walsh authorized DEA agents to do and seize. There is no reference to cameras-never mind to the destruction of them. I contacted Judge Walsh's court to ask whether he is interested in the possible overreaches of the warrant captured on the video. His clerk called me back basically to tell me he didn't want to hear about it. Eventually, I got Special Agent Kelly on the phone-the man who oversaw the riot-geared DEA team's charge into Long Beach Holistic on that sunny October morning. He sounded uncomfortable when I told him I've seen video of the raid. "Where did you come across that?" he asked. When I told him I'd rather not say, he referred me to Sarah Pullen, a public-information officer for the DEA. Pullen listened attentively as I began to review what can be seen on the video. When I asked her if the part where the agent points an assault rifle at the skateboarder is consistent with DEA policy, to my surprise, she said, "Yes." A second later, however, she said my questions sound "accusatory" and declined to answer more. But Joe Elford, chief counsel for Americans for Safe Access, the nation's largest medpot advocacy group, was more than happy to talk with me about the video of the raid. "It sounds like a blatant violation of the Fourth Amendment. . . . They're not allowed to point assault rifles in people's faces just because they have a warrant." Or hearts, I assume. Long Beach's elected officials gave me the same kind of runaround when I tried-and tried and tried-to get them to answer a simple two-part question: How do you feel about medpot dispensaries in Long Beach, and how do you feel about federal raids on them? The rundown: . Mayor Bob Foster: His office repeatedly promised me some sort of comment, but I heard nothing. Finally, I tracked him down at Portfolio coffee house, where he was trying to persuade voters to approve Measure I (the proposed tax increase for infrastructure repair). The mayor was kind enough to step outside with me as he was leaving. When he heard the topic, he said: "I'm happy to talk to you about it-I just don't want to do this on the fly" and asked me to call his office (again). When I did, I was told they'd heard I'd been talking to the LBPD about this and deferred comment to them. I replied that, since my question was about Foster's feelings, it couldn't be deferred to the police. I never heard back. I followed up, and they deferred to the LBPD-again-as if we hadn't already been through this. . Assembly member Bonnie Lowenthal: She was still the First District council member during the weeks and weeks I tried to get an answer from her. Finally, I got a short written statement, the gist of which is in its closing lines: "I care deeply about providing compassionate care to those who need it. It is certainly frustrating to want to help those who get relief from medical marijuana, while also protecting neighborhoods from nuisance activities, but until the state develops clearer guidelines for cities to use, we, as a city, cannot do it ourselves." There is no reference to federal raids. . Congressperson Laura Richardson (whose 37th District was home to LBH): I spoke repeatedly with her offices in Long Beach and in Washington, D.C., and was promised someone would get back to me. Someone never did. Finally, I got her communications director in Washington on the phone: He said he never got wind of my message, but now he'd have something for me. Nope. . Senator Alan Lowenthal (whose 27th District was home to LBH): After several calls, Chief of Staff John Casey noted that the senator "is a proponent of dispensaries, as long as they're [operating] within state law," since "the people in California have spoken overwhelmingly in favor of them" and "he wishes the federal government would respect the views of the voters and not conduct raids." The most outspoken official I came across was Second District council member Suja Lowenthal, who was with the mayor that day at Portfolio. During a public Q&A she wasn't even a little reticent: On medpot dispensaries in Long Beach: "There are some in my district. [ . . . ] I'm okay with that [ . . . ] as long as they're in compliance with the law. [ . . . ] I think the majority of them are in compliance with the law." On the conflict between federal and state medpot laws: "I don't know how we're going to navigate that, but we have to navigate that." On DEA raids on legal medpot facilities in Long Beach: "I would take umbrage with that." The predicament of Long Beach government-stuck between the state and the feds-is delicate and difficult. But the problem is compounded when the proposed solution is, as Bonnie Lowenthal said, that the city has to wait until those other governmental bodies clear things up. Being caught in the middle does, in fact, give each city some freedom to chart its own course. For example, in September, the Garden Grove City Council passed a ban on all medpot dispensaries. Almost simultaneously, the Santa Cruz City Council passed a one-day repeal of its ban on public smoking in general, so patients could medicate during the Wo/Men's Alliance for Medical Marijuana's annual WAMMfest. But what will we do? Our police would almost certainly rather not be bothered. LeBaron echoes what I hear repeatedly: "I think most officers would say they'd rather be paying attention to the crack dealer with a gun in his belt than medical marijuana." Yet our city representatives tend to say little as they wait and see. But citizens have already spoken on the issue. And sick people are being denied their medicine. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake