Pubdate: Fri, 04 Dec 2009 Source: Record Searchlight (Redding, CA) Copyright: 2009 Record Searchlight Contact: http://www.redding.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/360 Author: Janet O'Neill Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) TEHAMA COUNTY POT COLLECTIVE REMAINS SHUT DOWN RED BLUFF - District Attorney Gregg Cohen's request for a court-ordered shutdown of the only medical marijuana collective in Tehama County's jurisdiction may be dropped, but Red Bluff Patient Collective - at least for the moment - remains closed. "We are pleased to announce we have tentatively reached an agreement," assistant county counsel Arthur Wylene, serving as a deputy district attorney in the matter, told Superior Court Judge John Garaventa on Thursday. Cohen, who appeared in court with Wylene, sought a temporary injunction - a civil action - after Dawn and Mike Jenkins refused to close their Antelope Boulevard collective, he said. But after consulting Redding attorney Keith Cope, the couple agreed to stop operating pending further court proceedings. Garaventa continued the matter until Dec. 15, when attorneys expect to propose a stipulated judgment "that we won't go to the extent of having a court-ordered injunction," Cohen said. After Thursday's proceedings, Cope said he'd met with county lawyers on Monday for more than two hours. "At the county's invitation, the Jenkinses feel that the best approach for all concerned is to work with the county on a long-term basis to promote appropriate regulations to best serve medical marijuana patients in the future," Cope said. "They are here to stay." Cohen sees it differently. "They agreed today that they're going to remain shut down," he said by telephone on Thursday afternoon. "We just want the sales of marijuana at that location to be stopped." Cope credited the Board of Supervisors with its efforts so far to draft an ordinance that regulates medical marijuana collectives. Just last week, the board and other county officials met for more than two hours to discuss the options. "It's the job of any municipality to filter the drug dealers" from those who are legitimately serving the needs of the public, Cope said. Also Dec. 15, the Jenkinses will be arraigned on 70 misdemeanor counts stemming from near-daily citations issued by Sheriff Clay Parker beginning Oct. 15. Those citations allege violations of the county's medical marijuana dispensary moratorium, adopted Sept. 15, and the zoning code. "Our office's main interest was to ensure the county's ordinance was upheld," Cohen said. But the couple maintain they were operating before the moratorium. "That is a factual issue that we will contest," Cope said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D