Pubdate: Tue, 20 Jul 2010 Source: Bozeman Daily Chronicle (MT) Copyright: 2010 The Bozeman Daily Chronicle Contact: http://bozemandailychronicle.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1686 Author: Gail Schontzler BUSTED: GRATEFUL SHED CASE SHOWS HOW FEDS CAN CRACK DOWN The story of the Grateful Shed could be a cautionary tale for Montana's high-flying medical marijuana industry. Over 21 years, Gallatin County's leading "head shop" has sold an assortment of smoking pipes, water pipes, Bob Marley and Grateful Dead posters, colorful tie-dyed clothing and concoctions designed to keep certain substances from showing up in employees' drug tests. While the Grateful Shed sells all the accoutrements one might use for smoking tobacco or marijuana, it does not sell the forbidden weed, insists Peggy Holstine, 51. She is co-owner of the shop with partner Thomas B. Robinson and her husband, Bob Holstine, who got his start following Grateful Dead concerts around the country in an old school bus, selling pipes and T-shirts. The lack of actual marijuana in the shop didn't keep the federal Drug Enforcement Agency from busting their business and similar shops in Missoula, Great Falls and Kalispell in May 2005, during the Bush administration. "I was in the back, tie-dying," Holstine recalled, chatting at the counter of the incense-scented shop, located for the past year in Bozeman at 2230 W. Main St. "The DEA came and took all our stuff. They took everything. They were rude, hostile. "I was hysterical. They kept searching, looking for drugs," she said. "I said, 'No, look everywhere, there's nothing!'" Though the feds came up empty-handed on drugs, they still indicted the shop's then-partners, Steve Andriakos and Robinson, on federal charges of selling drug paraphernalia. After fighting in court for a year, the case ended in June 2006 with the judge tossing out Andriakos' charge for lack of sufficient evidence. Robinson's case resulted in a hung jury in Butte federal court. It probably cost them $250,000 in legal fees and seized inventory, none of which was ever returned, Holstine said. "It was quite an ordeal." Federal attorneys agreed not to put Robinson on trial again, and in exchange he signed a deal to pay a $5,000 fine, give up all seized inventory, and not to sell for two years any pipes, grinders, sifters, roach clips, miniature spoons, or scales that could be used with illegal drugs, according to court records. Since the Obama administration announced it wouldn't prosecute medical marijuana cases that comply with state laws, the business climate has changed - and not for the better -- at the Grateful Shed. "Everybody thinks because it's legal, we're doing major business. It's not true," Holstine said. When the Grateful Shed was located at Four Corners, it could afford four employees, she said. Now, it's just the partners, who take turns running the store. Holstine said some of today's medical marijuana sellers are "totally ridiculous," flaunting marijuana leaf posters in their storefront windows. The Grateful Shed is much more circumspect, with signs posted asking patrons not to talk about anything illegal in the store. Even more sedate medical marijuana storefronts are competing with the Grateful Shed. "It's not fair," Holstine said. "They're selling pipes, too." While there are good marijuana caregivers, a minority is pushing the limits of the new law, she said. She was shocked to talk to some kids from Colorado who claimed they had just walked in and purchased marijuana from one Bozeman storefront. "I moved here 11 years ago, and I had to wait six months to get a fishing license," Holstine said. "And I had to show them my phone bill. "It's a little out of control." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D