Pubdate: Thu, 09 Jun 2011
Source: Daily Tribune, The (Royal Oak, MI)
Copyright: 2011 The Daily Tribune
Contact:  http://www.dailytribune.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1579
Author: Carol Hopkins, The Daily Tribune

ATTORNEYS DEFENDING CLIENTS' MEDICAL MARIJUANA-RELATED DRUG CHARGES
PLEASED ABOUT DEVELOPMENTS

Ferndale Man Among Defendants

Using the word "breakthrough," attorneys defending clients fighting
medical marijuana-related drug charges stemming from a raid last year
left an Oakland County Circuit Court hearing Wednesday sounding
pleased about developments.

"I'm glad the judge is giving us a chance," said Neil Rockind, who
represents Matthew John-Drinnon Miller of Waterford.

Specifically, Judge Phyllis McMillen has agreed to hold evidentiary
hearings in the case, allowing defendants to testify before her.

"The defense wants to introduce that police officers pretended to be
medical marijuana patients," said Loren Dickstein, a defense attorney.

"It's critical that the evidence comes in."

McMillen would then decide whether the cases would go on to a
jury.

If defense attorneys disagree with her decision, they could take the
case to the Court of Appeals.

Five defense attorneys were before McMillen for Wednesday's pre-trial
in the complex case.

Their defendants include: William Teichman, Brian Vaughan, Miller,
Kirk Alan Swafford and Jennifer Zuck, all of Waterford; and Andrew
Nater of Ferndale.

Effort to split up the defendants fails

Because McMillen recused herself from the case of defendant Candace
Teichman earlier this year - McMillen said they are former neighbors
and used to be in a golf league together and McMillen's attorney
husband worked on Teichman's divorce case - defense attorneys
Wednesday argued their clients' cases should also be separated and
heard before a different judge.

Rockind argued because his client, Matthew Miller, was connected to
Candace Teichman, Miller should be either separated from the pack or
tried with Teichman.

Other attorneys stepped forward with the same request.

McMillen didn't buy it.

"It was the luck of the draw, bad luck, so now I have these cases,"
said McMillen.

She said she wasn't going to "dump this on Judge (Rae Lee) Chabot"
(who is now the judge in Candace Teichman's case).

"I would be shirking my duties," McMillen said.

"I'm not going to do it."

Candace and her husband, William, operated Everybody's Cafe and Herbal
Remedies in Waterford Township. The facility was raided Aug. 25,
thrusting the couple from White Lake into the center of a public
dispute with the Oakland County law enforcement community involving
the state's medical marijuana law.

A drug task force also raided in August a medical marijuana club
called Clinical Relief in Ferndale, making several arrests. Earlier
this year, deputies raided a medical marijuana dispensary in Oak Park.

In court Wednesday McMillen admitted the many medical marijuana cases
"are weighing heavily on me," she said, adding she wanted to find a
"fair way to deal with them."

She even stated she hadn't studied so many case law for guidance and
background since law school.

"We are dealing with a new law and not a lot of direction or direct
rulings from the Court of Appeals," she said.

She described finding a Michigan case - People v. D'Angelo, 1977 -
which provided a similar set of circumstances to what is now in
Circuit Court.

She then told the attorneys evidentiary hearings would be
held.

"You will present what you want," she said.

Both attorneys and the judge used the metaphor of "throwing spaghetti
against the wall to see what sticks."

The next special pre-trial in the matter will be held June 27.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.