Pubdate: Thu, 02 Dec 2010 Source: Telegraph, The (Nashua, NH) Copyright: 2010 Telegraph Publishing Company Contact: http://www.nashuatelegraph.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/885 Author: Andrew Wolfe, Staff Writer Note: MAP archives articles exactly as published, except that our editors may redact the names and addresses of accused persons who have not been convicted of a crime, if those named are not otherwise public figures or officials. LULL FARM OWNER SAYS ARREST MADE HIM ADVOCATE HOLLIS - As David Orde sees it, marijuana and it's legal status wasn't really the point of what happened to him, but it is now. Orde, 55, owner of Lull Farm, spent some $150,000 to fight felony charges that resulted after police found more than a dozen marijuana plants growing in pots on the deck of his home at [address redacted]. On Tuesday, the New Hampshire Supreme Court reversed Orde's conviction, finding that police overstepped their authority and violated Orde's constitutional right to privacy. The ruling clearly came as a relief and vindication, and Orde said Wednesday it was worth the fight. The issue really wasn't the marijuana," Orde said. "From the word go it was why did they walk around the house and go up on my deck.... It was worth fighting for, I think." Orde and his son Andrew were arrested on the felony marijuana-growing charges July 29, 2008, after Hollis Police Officer Angel Corrado discovered the plants while trying to serve Orde with a complaint for failing to license his dog. No one answered at the door, so Corrado walked across the lawn, through a gap in a lilac hedge and onto a side deck, where he spotted 16 marijuana plants growing in pots. Orde freely admitted the plants were his, and police subsequently got a warrant and searched the house. There was really no disputing the plants or their illicit status, but Orde said the police "pawing through the house" left him feeling violated. It felt like a real invasion from the word go. That's why I fought the battle," Orde said. Orde said he doesn't think Corrado had any business anywhere near his deck. It's way out of course for the average person... Nobody has ever knocked on those doors of my house (off the deck)," in the 30 years he's lived there, Orde said. "Of course I feel violated for that happening." In seeking the warrant, police cited a garden hose that was protruding from the basement bulkhead. They didn't mention, Orde said, that the hose was set up to drain water out of, not into, the basement. Though Orde's son Andrew decided to negotiate a guilty plea to a misdemeanor, Orde said the teen was innocent, and the equipment police claimed was for growing marijuana actually had been used to keep his son's boa constrictor, though his son no longer had the snake at the time. The saddest part about this is my son, Andrew," Orde said. "It's been shocking to me to see how the legal system works.... It was a reptile tank." As for Orde himself, he said he still finds it ridiculous that he or anyone else can be arrested for possessing that particular plant. I'm not going to hang my head that I like to relax at night," Orde said. "I was facing jail time and a felony for smoking a little pot... It's not right." Orde has smoked marijuana occasionally for years, he said, but never thought much about it until after his arrest. Since then, he said, he's become an impassioned advocate for the legalization of both marijuana and hemp. This whole war on marijuana... When you study marijuana and you read the facts, you realize that this whole war on marijuana is based on nothing but lies and propaganda," Orde said. "It's probably the biggest social injustice since slavery that we are arresting 1 million people a year for a drug that has never killed anybody." Orde said he believes that marijuana is harmless compared against cocaine, heroin and some prescription drugs, and less socially destructive than alcohol. The more educated you are, the more you realize how insane this whole thing is," Orde said. The Lull Farm web site has a section titled, "cannabis corner," with news on efforts to legalize marijuana and hemp cultivation, and the farm stand sells hemp products. Orde said he is thinking about organizing an annual hemp festival. The news and controversy around his arrest hasn't effected business at the farm, so far as he can tell, he said. While he may have lost some customers, he said, others have been supportive. If anything comes out of this in a positive way, I will be an advocate for marijuana reform as long as I live," Orde said. "The anger is gone. I have no anger anymore. It's going to turn into something positive now." - - Andrew Wolfe - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D