Pubdate: Sat, 28 May 2011 Source: Holland Sentinel (MI) Copyright: 2011 GateHouse Media, Inc. Contact: http://extra.hollandsentinel.com/submitletter.shtml Website: http://www.hollandsentinel.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1145 Author: Megan Schmidt, The Holland Sentinel OTTAWA COUNTY TURNS OVER MEDICAL MARIJUANA RECORDS Holland, MI - When Ottawa County handed over hundreds of pages of documents relating to medical marijuana, freelance journalist Eric VanDussen considered it a victory. In September, the Traverse City-based researcher submitted a Freedom of Information Act request for the documents, but the county summarily rejected it because the data was "exempt from disclosure under the Attorney Work-Product privilege," which protects attorneys from having to disclose materials that could reveal their theory of a case or trial strategy. So VanDussen filed a lawsuit in his home county against Ottawa County Prosecutor Ron Frantz, seeking $500 in punitive damages in addition to having the county turn over the documents. He claimed the county "arbitrarily and capriciously violated the FOIA." About six weeks later, the lawsuit was dismissed, and the county turned over about 700 pages of documents. VanDussen is working on a documentary and wants to find out "which prosecutors are more apt to go after medical marijuana patients with the full force of the law," he said. "There's no conformity at all," he said. "That's what I'm interested in. It's been two-and-a-half years (since the state's medical marijuana law went into effect), and there's still no real standards or direction for people who are involved in medical marijuana. "I absolutely knew their argument that those records were not public records was ludicrous," said VanDussen, who is researching the differences in how medical marijuana cases are being prosecuted in Michigan counties. Doug Van Essen, an attorney for Ottawa County, sees the situation quite differently. The FOIA request was simply directed to the wrong place, he said. "We could say, 'Look, you should have sent the FOIA to the county, not the prosecutor,' however we said, 'Give us three weeks and we will give you some --not all -- of the documents you're looking for.' We could have made him drive down from Traverse City and look through all those records but instead we gathered them up." VanDussen's initial request was rejected because he asked for documents the prosecutor wasn't authorized to give, such as police reports, Van Essen said. "He was targeting the wrong official," he said. Records show VanDussen emailed his FOIA request to Ottawa County Prosecutor Ron Frantz on Sept. 9. He asked for documents detailing marijuana-related arrests or criminal charges in which the defendant either had a medical marijuana card or argued they had a medical reason for using marijuana. He similar FOIA requests in Michigan's other 82 counties; Ottawa and Kalkaska counties sent him rejections, VanDussen said. The county reached an agreement with VanDussen in April, however, promising to hand over medical marijuana law-related police reports and search warrants for free. If the prosecutor's office was unable to provide certain documents, they should have stated so in their letter to VanDussen, he said, then given him what they could. Meanwhile, Kalkaska County has also agreed to give VanDussen the information he requested. He's still waiting to receive documents from several other counties, too. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.