Pubdate: Wed, 21 Jul 2010
Source: Arcata Eye (CA)
Copyright: 2010 Arcata Eye
Contact:  http://www.arcataeye.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1210
Author: Mark Sailors
Note: Mark N. Sailors is owner/pilot of Arcata Kineticab.

CANNABIS - ILLEGAL, QUASI-LEGAL AND LEGAL

The United States has had a long, love-hate relationship with
cannabis, and that is apparent in Humboldt County and the City of
Arcata in particular. Let's take an honest look at the ramifications
Arcata faced and faces with illegal, quasi-legal and legal cannabis.

Illegal

Since 1937, cannabis, aka "marijuana," has been illegal in the United
States. At that time it was the second most prescribed medicine in the
country. The physicians did not know that this "marijuana" that the
Congress was proposing to make illegal was Cannabis Sativa, one of
their most effective tools. As a matter of fact, the American Medical
Association opposed the act because the tax was imposed on physicians
prescribing cannabis, retail pharmacists selling cannabis, and medical
cannabis cultivation/manufacturing; instead of enacting the Marihuana
Tax Act, the AMA proposed cannabis be added to the Harrison Narcotics
Tax Act. Their protest came too late. Not since alcohol prohibition
has there been such a failure of policy and practice. Let's explore
the dark side of illegal cannabis.

 From the 1960s and '70s, there was a movement, a back to the land
moment that brought "hippies" to the North Coast. With them came their
pot. This is the picture that has come to dominate.

It is false. The illegal cannabis trade is not full of hippies. These
are business people out to make a buck, pure and simple.

When cannabis came to the North Coast, people grew it outside, in the
sun. Then came CAMP, or the Campaign Against Marijuana Planting.
Things changed. No longer were people willing to plant cannabis in
their yard, or near their house. They were afraid that the choppers
would invade them military style, and arrest them and take their children.

They were right. This led to local radio stations, that will remain
nameless, broadcasting CAMP flights, and when and were the Feds are on
local roads. This has led to the sheriff in Mendocino County, Tom
Allan, to call on this particular station to cease this behavior.
Turns out that the local public radio station gets a lot of money in
donations from local residents, so the station will continue to
broadcast the locations of these police actions. So, now you can't
grow outside near your home, the capitalist American mind takes over
and thinks, "Hmmm. where can I plant my crop that will keep choppers
out of my backyard?" We all know the answer to that one: NATIONAL FORESTS.

The move from mom and pops growing some cannabis in their yards on a
limited scale, to massive "ganja plantations" had begun. Around the
same time, somewhere in the 1980s people got the idea of smaller,
higher-quality INDOOR gardens, higher quality genetics and custom bred
strains. And so began the "indoor/ outdoor" wars.

Along came the diesel generators humming into the night in rural
Humboldt County.

Massive, windowless structures running 20 to 100,1000 watt lights.
These indoor gardens require pesticides, and fungicides. Retailers of
fuel turning their backs when "growers" load massive amounts of diesel
into unapproved containers in the back of pickup trucks, or worse yet
DELIVERING the fuel and unloading it into unsafe, un-permitted,
leaking storage tanks. This leads to spills that work their way into
our watershed.

Some people did not want the work or hassle of moving indoors, some
didn't have the property. Those "growers" went to work planting in the
National Forests. Your land, my land, everyone's land. At first it was
a few plants here and there, then larger gardens, that illegally
diverted water, though still on a much smaller scale than we see now.
This led to "booby traps," firearms, pesticide use, illegal camping,
forest fires and an inability to use the forest by the "common man."

All of this was a "wink wink, nudge nudge" relationship with the
community. The growers contributed to local charities, brought music
and culture to this rural area, and brought a more modern attitude to
the coast. The community turned a blind eye to this because, with the
decline in timber revenue, the area NEEDED some sort of cash influx.

And so it went through the late 1980s into the '90s, gradually getting
bigger, gradually more forest land was being used, and less care was
being taken with the land. Police were increasing the arrest rate, but
the growers were multiplying faster than the arrests.

Then something unexpected happened in 1996: Proposition 215 was voted
into law by the citizens of California. Medical Marijuana was now
legal, and things were about to change drastically.

Quasi-Legal

On November 5, 1996 things changed. Proposition 215 became the law of
the land in California. No longer would patients have to fear arrest,
or imprisonment for cultivation or use of medical marijuana, at least
that is what we were promised. Since then we have had an INCREASE in
marijuana-related offenses, not a decrease. We have seen police, DAs
and entire counties DISREGARD the law that the voters enacted. Some,
like San Diego, fought the law all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court,
and lost.

Since 1996, and the passage of prop 215, there have been two distinct
classes of cannabis user, the legal and the illegal. It has been a
nightmare for enforcement. Under the law a doctor may recommend
medical cannabis to any patient with a disease or disorder that the
doctor feels may be helped by cannabis therapy.

Yet the arrests multiply. Some police say that there are "too many
healthy looking young adults" using medical cannabis. Other police
cite increased crime, although the facts don't seem to bear that
statement out (unless you count legitimate patients using cannabis a
crime, which some police do).

The fact that people can get a piece of paper from a doctor that gives
them the RIGHT to posses, use, and cultivate cannabis led to a sea
change in cannabis production.

People were no longer scared to plant a few plants in their yard, and
people that live in towns, and in smaller units felt perfectly safe
installing an indoor cannabis garden.

They were mistaken to feel safe. The police continue to raid sick
patients' homes, destroying their medicine, taking them to jail,
ruining their personal possessions, having CPS come to take their
children, costing them tons of money to defend themselves, and some
are bullied into taking plea bargains for something that was not a
crime for them under the law.

We have had court cases ad nauseam to determine what is and what is
not legal under the statewide voter enacted amendment to the
California Constitution. Here is a little overview of cite able case
law:

The Berry Decision: The court found that patients may use cannabis while on
probation or parole.

The Bearman Decision: The court found that qualified patients making
edibles, hash, and kief are "clearly legal," but that using butane to make
"hash oil" is a chemical extraction that is not covered by Prop 215, the
CUA, even though the oil itself is a legal product.

The Chakos Decision: States "Nowhere in this record do we find any
substantial evidence that the arresting officer had any expertise in
differentiating citizens who possess marijuana lawfully for their own
consumption, as distinct from possessing unlawfully with intent to sell."

The Kha Decision: The Court Of Appeals found that local police must return
medical cannabis to a patient if the patient is found to be legitimate under
State law, even if Federal law says cannabis is illegal. The court ruled
"Mindful as we are of the general supremacy of federal law, we are unable to
discern any justification for the City or its police department to disregard
the trial court's order to return Kha's marijuana. The order is fully
consistent with state law respecting the possession of medical marijuana,
and for all the reasons discussed, we do not believe the federal drug laws
supersede or preempt Kha's right to the return of his property. That right
has its origins in the CUA and MMP, but it is grounded, at bottom, on
fairness principles embodied in the due process clause. Those principles
require the return of Kha's property."

The Mentch Decision: The California Supreme Court found that the "caregiver"
defense was only open to persons "who have consistently assumed
responsibility for the housing, health or safety of that person." This
decision did not limit the activities of patient collectives or co-ops
operating legally under Health and Safety Code 11362.775.

The Spark Decision: Judges and Juries do not get the option of second
guessing a doctors recommendation. The physicians are the "gatekeepers," not
the courts.

San Diego v. NORML: California counties and agencies MUST follow
California law, not Federal law. Federal law DOES NOT TRUMP STATE LAW.

The Trippet Decision: (Humboldt County) Patients are not allowed unlimited
amounts of cannabis, the amounts should reasonably be related to the
patient's
personal use, but transportation and possession are authorized. "The rule
should be that the quantity possessed by the patient or the primary
caregiver, and the form and manner in which it is possessed, should be
reasonably related to the patient's current medical needs. What precisely
are the "patient's current medical needs" must, of course, remain a factual
question to be determined by the trier of fact."

The Oceanus Decision: Appeals court found that the RIGHT to collectively
obtain, cultivate and dispense are protected by HS 11362.7, not HS11362.5

The Windus Decision: A doctor's recommendation is NOT an annual requirement,
it can be good for years. A doctor's dosage is "advisory," it does not limit
a patient from possessing a "reasonable" amount even if it is more than what
is recommended.

The Wright Decision: The California Supreme Court held that SB420 (the MMPA)
even though they are couched in mandatory terms, the limits set forth in HS
11362.77 sub. (a) were a "threshold not a ceiling."

The Kelly Decision: Three separate Appeals Courts ruled that the limits on
the amount of cannabis a patient may possess listed in SB420 were
UNCONSTITUTIONAL. The Court found that the "limits" were fine as a "safe
harbor" for State MMPA card holders, but did not limit the ability of
qualified patients to posses more or use the MMPA as a defense in court. The
Court also found that the State ID card system IS constitutional, and that
patient co-ops and collectives operating under HS 11362.775 are
constitutionally protected STATEWIDE.

Given all of these cases it is amazing that the police are still
arresting legitimate patients.

Now we all know about the "grow house" epidemic. I would say it is
overblown. Ninety percent of the cannabis being grown in Arcata is
legal. What is not legal is the wanton destruction of rentals.

Let me make myself very clear here: WE ALL HATE WHAT IS BEING DONE TO
RENTAL HOUSING.

That being said, it is not legal to restrict patients from using,
possessing or cultivating their own medicine in their own home, and
that does in fact include rental. The practice of screening potential
renters and placing "no 215" in rental adds is ILLEGAL, it is a
violation of the Thomas Bane Civil Rights act. Let's also be clear
here, it is already illegal to destroy a rental property. It is
already a crime to steal electricity. Let's focus on those issues,
because that is where the actual damage to properties comes from, the
ILLEGAL grows that are only in it for a buck.

Cut to 2010. The courts are now wading into the authority of local
communities to limit Prop 215 activities. On June 4, 2010 in Red Bluff
patients supported by CANORML filed a lawsuit against a county law
that limits their right to grow medical cannabis in their own homes.
The plaintiffs claim their rights are being violated by an ordinance
that makes it impossible for them to produce their own medicine, as is
allowed under state law. The Tehama County ordinance declares it a
public nuisance to grow marijuana anywhere within 1,000 feet of a
school, school bus stop, church, park, or youth-oriented facility;
restricts gardens to no more than 12 mature or 24 total plants on
parcels of 20 acres or less; requires outdoor gardens to be surrounded
by an opaque fence at least six feet high and located 100 feet or more
from the property boundaries; and requires every patient garden to be
registered with the county health services agency for a fee to be determined.

Nowhere in Prop 215, nor the MMPA does it allow for any of those
restrictions. California NORML attorneys argue that local governments
cannot legally declare activities that are protected by state law to
be nuisances. They are correct.

"They can't take everyone's rights away," says attorney Edie Lerman.
California law states patients can have whatever they need for
themselves and for collectives." Lerman is also the lawyer for a
lawsuit aimed at Mendocino County's 25 plant per parcel ordinance."The
right to cultivate is fundamental to Prop. 215's mandate that
'seriously ill Californians have the right to obtain and use marijuana
for medical purposes,'" says California NORML Director Dale Gieringer,
a co-author of Prop 215. If prior cases are any indication, State law
will "trump" local ordinances. Only time will tell if the ordinance
that Arcata passed will stand.

Legal

This November the voters of California will have a vote on the single
biggest issue they have ever been asked. Will you vote to legalize,
tax, and regulate cannabis? The polls show 56 percent support for
legalization in California, and that number seems to be rising.

On June 29, 2010 the California NAACP announced its "unconditional
support" for The Regulate, Control & Tax Cannabis Initiative 2010. In
2008, police in California made over 61,000 arrests for marijuana
possession offenses, a criminal misdemeanor. Law enforcement made over
17,000 additional arrests for marijuana felony violations - a category
that includes personal cultivation of even a single plant. This number
also includes many medical cannabis patients that were not violating
the law in any way.

This is a time when we can all get together and make something that
has been a part of our community for years into something that will
revitalize Arcata. And the entire North Coast. We could be the first
community to fully embrace the Legalization of cannabis by allowing
retail stores, smoking lounges, Amsterdam-style coffee shops, tasting
tours, schools to learn how to grow it yourself, wholesale production
- - the sky is the limit really.

We recently lost our airline service to the major hubs because we
could not fill the seats. Imagine how many people would come here to
vacation if we were the Amsterdam of the West Coast? Enough to bring
the airlines back, that's for sure.

We would stop losing housing to "grow houses" because anyone that
wanted to grow commercially could get a license and rent or buy a
place to do so. Our police could go back to making the quality of life
better in Arcata by focusing their limited resources on "quality of
life" crimes like aggressive panhandling, public intoxication, public
urination, camping/loose dogs in the parks, DUIs, and making it safe
for women to walk down the street at night without being sexually
assaulted, like the young woman who was raped on Monday night at the
Arcata Sports Complex just a few feet away from a softball game.

For once we have a chance to get something right in this state, and I
for one hope we vote YES on The Regulate, Control & Tax Cannabis
Initiative 2010, also known as Prop 19.

Mark N. Sailors is owner/pilot of Arcata Kineticab. 
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jo-D