Pubdate: Wed, 08 Sep 2010 Source: Chico Enterprise-Record (CA) Copyright: 2010 Chico Enterprise-Record Contact: http://www.chicoer.com/feedback Website: http://www.chicoer.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/861 Note: Letters from newspaper's circulation area receive publishing priority Author: Geoff Johnson, MediaNews Group Note: Geoff Johnson is a reporter with the Red Bluff Daily News. TEHAMA'S SOLE REMAINING STOREFRONT-STYLE POT COLLECTIVE RAIDED BY AGENTS CORNING - Police and drug agents raided Tehama County's sole remaining storefront-style marijuana collective Tuesday, along with the home of its owner and a second property in Rancho Tehama belonging to him. As of about 4 p.m. Tuesday, all the marijuana in Tehama Herbal Collective in Corning had been seized. Agents also took paperwork, computers and more than $12,400 from the collective. Agents seized another 100 plants from a property on Elder Creek Circle in Rancho Tehama belonging to THC owner and Corning City Council candidate Ken Prather, another $1,200 and records from his Walnut Street residence in Corning. "I'm pretty sure they have access to additional marijuana," Tehama County Inter-agency Drug Enforcement Team Acting Special Agent Supervisor Eric Maher said. Maher said the warrants were served from a TIDE investigation going back to 2009. Undercover TIDE agents were reportedly able to purchase marijuana "starter" plants that year from THC employees, even though the agents had no medical marijuana recommendations. Agents reportedly purchased marijuana from THC on another six occasions without recommendations, in at one case even buying for a fictional friend, Maher said. Selling marijuana plants to someone without a medical recommendation is still considered a felony in California. Some local officials, including Maher, maintain that even under state law medical marijuana cannot be exchanged for money. "There's nothing in California law that allows for that," Maher said. No one has been arrested. Maher said he will be submitting evidence collected by TIDE offers to the district attorney. Calls to Prather and THC were not returned Tuesday afternoon. Prather shares THC ownership with his family. The family faces a court date this month for violating the city's zoning codes and operating in spite of a citywide ban on collectives. The city issued daily citations for months, but Prather and his wife, a medical marijuana patient, argued state medical marijuana laws and existing zoning codes, which allow for pharmacies, made the collective exempt. In July, Prather announced his candidacy for Corning City Council. Geoff Johnson is a reporter with the Red Bluff Daily News. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D