Pubdate: Wed, 25 Jun 2008 Source: Cleveland Free Times (OH) Copyright: 2008 Cleveland Free Times Media Contact: http://www.freetimes.com/contact Website: http://www.freetimes.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1385 Author: Dan Harkins Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v07/n089/a08.html Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal) ANOTHER BRUSH WITH THE LAW Randy Brush got some solid whiffs of what ails America in recent years, after serving nearly a year of a three-year prison sentence for getting caught growing four marijuana plants on the roof of his rural Wellsville home ("Just What the Doctor Ordered," Jan. 24, 2007). The middle-aged, now-divorced father of three teens was adamant: He was using the home pharmacy to calm the effects of a multitude of medical ailments and pharmaceutical side-effects: Arthritis. High blood pressure. Depression. And on... But try telling that, then or now, to Republican Judge C. Ashley Pike of Columbiana County, who openly called Brush a lowlife in court for quixotically assuming the medical cannabis defense and attracting so many potheads to the courthouse. At the time, Brush blamed his then-wife for tipping off the authorities. He's not sure who's responsible this time for why the DEA rammed through the doors of his new Columbiana County apartment on May 28 with a fresh search warrant from Pike, more than a year after he was released from a halfway house in Cleveland. "They got me down and handcuffed me and were screaming, "Where is it? Where is it?' and I was like, "I'm not helping you out this time around, guys,'" the 48-year-old recalled via phone Monday while enjoying a camping trip with two of his three kids. "I had two plants but I destroyed them before they could get to them." In all, Brush estimates the feds found "not even an ounce" for their troubles - a weight he believes will prevent a grand jury from levying new felony charges. That doesn't mean he doesn't fear the worst. "This county is ruled by Republicans," Brush says. "[Pike] was angry I got out early. He wanted me sitting in jail. But if I go to court again, I promise a show. I won't pay a fine or court costs or anything. I'll go to jail. It doesn't bother me. I'm going to have them wheel me everywhere I have to go, too [due to arthritis]. You know how much I'll cost them?" Brush says his medical conditions cost the state as much as $250,000 for his 10 months of incarceration, including an appendectomy that was long-overlooked because medical staff didn't believe his complaints of lingering pain. "I'm just doing what I can to live," he says, "and I don't think most people would want the law devoting these kinds of resources for something like this. ... I'm sure they're going to try to throw the book at me, but punishing people who are sick for trying to do something to help themselves - that's going to make them look worse than me." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake