Pubdate: Sat, 19 Apr 2008 Source: Sacramento Bee (CA) Page: B1, Metro section Copyright: 2008 The Sacramento Bee Contact: http://www.sacbee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/376 Note: Does not publish letters from outside its circulation area. Author: Denny Walsh Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal) FEDERAL JUDGE SENTENCES PLUMAS POT GROWERS Another lengthy and emotional hearing on medical marijuana punishment played out Friday in Sacramento federal court, culminating in the sentencing of a Plumas County man to two years in prison and his wife to six months. Jeffre Sean Sanderson and his wife, Alice Jean Wiegand, were arrested in 2006 on federal marijuana charges. The couple insisted they grew and used marijuana for medicinal and spiritual purposes. But confronted with the reality that medical necessity is not a defense in federal court, they pleaded guilty in November to manufacturing the drug at their home in the steep, wooded Rush Creek Canyon. Because Plumas family court plans to restore custody of the couple's children one an infant and the other a toddler to Wiegand on April 28, U.S. District Judge Frank C. Damrell Jr. allowed her to remain free until Dec. 1. There will be a six-month trial period after the children return to her, and the judge did not want to disturb that. He told the 30-year-old Wiegand she will have the next 7 1/2 months to arrange care for the children while she is in prison. Child Protective Services took the children when she and Sanderson were arrested. Wiegand attorney Danny Brace Jr. sought probation for his client. But Damrell said she needs the six months to ponder the wisdom of allowing Sanderson to grow marijuana on property she owned. The government has now taken the land because it was used for a criminal activity. "You put cannabis at the center of your life at the risk of losing your children," the judge told Wiegand. "Anybody who would do that has no sense of balance. Wouldn't you agree?" "Yes, your honor," she replied softly. Damrell stressed that keeping the family together for the children's sake is his priority, and said that was also a consideration when he decided on the two-year term for the 27-year-old Sanderson. The sentence was six months less than one urged by prosecutor Michael Beckwith and 22 months below a probation officer's recommendation. Beckwith and defense attorney Timothy Zindel previously agreed Sanderson's plants yielded roughly 165 pounds of marijuana. Predictably, Friday's hearing did not go smoothly. Zindel believes his client has been wrongly accused by the government of lying when he said he never sold pot, and the lawyer put up a fierce fight for probation. Damrell said he believes Sanderson was not truthful with the probation officer regarding income, a pronouncement that caught Zindel off guard and an issue not directly addressed in the flood of court papers preceding the sentencings. A heated exchange ensued, with Damrell declaring Zindel "out of order" at one point. "It's an irrelevant issue that came right out of left field and is based on assumptions that are dead wrong," Zindel said after the hearing. He announced to Damrell his intention to appeal Sanderson's sentence. Both Zindel and his client assured the judge Sanderson's motives were altruistic, but Damrell was having none of it. "You put your children at risk," the judge told Sanderson. "You put your wife's life at risk. Think about the misery you've caused. You're narcissistic to the point that you are a danger." The 11 weeks leading up to Friday's hearing have seen a multitude of filings by the government and defense and a protracted evidentiary hearing on whether Sanderson sold pot. Beckwith initially agreed to a certain amount of leniency for Sanderson and Wiegand, contingent on the pair giving full and truthful accounts of their marijuana enterprise to him and narcotics agents. He changed his mind after a neighbor came forward to claim Sanderson did sell marijuana, contrary to the couple's denials. "This case is nothing more than a straightforward, run-of-the-mill drug case, with two important exceptions: 1) (Sanderson) is a recidivist who has no respect for the law or the court's orders; and 2) he created a drug-plagued environment that endangered the development of two very young children," Beckwith wrote in a memorandum filed Feb. 29. An outraged Zindel labeled the neighbor a liar, accused Beckwith of character assassination and said the U.S. attorney's office has historically resorted to such tactics in cases involving claims of medical use. "This case has made it clear to me that marijuana does, in fact, cause delusions on the part of the government," he said in an interview. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake