Pubdate: Wed, 08 Apr 2015 Source: Arizona Republic (Phoenix, AZ) Copyright: 2015 The Arizona Republic Contact: http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/opinions/sendaletter.html Website: http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/24 Author: Yvonne Wingett Sanchez E-MAIL: POT-LEGALIZATION GROUP'S LEADER TARGETS RIVAL ORGANIZATION The director of a group behind an initiative to legalize pot in Arizona threatened to target the business affairs of a marijuana-dispensary medical director who joined a competing legalization effort, documents obtained by The Arizona Republic show. Two groups have filed paperwork with the Secretary of State's Office to pursue initiatives legalizing recreational marijuana: the influential Washington, D.C.-based Marijuana Policy Project and the newly created Arizonans for Responsible Legalization. The conflict focuses on Gina Berman, medical director at the Giving Tree Wellness Center marijuana dispensary and an emergency-room physician. Berman worked with the Marijuana Policy Project's campaign committee before joining Arizonans for Responsible Legalization. The documents shed light on conflicting philosophies behind the proposed ballot measures and offer insight into how the 2016 ballot initiatives may be pitched to Arizona voters. In an e-mail to Berman late last month, Rob Kampia, co-founder and executive director of the Marijuana Policy Project, which has helped with legalization efforts in other states, expressed surprise at her departure. "Obviously, I was shocked to learn that you formed a campaign committee to compete with your own campaign committee," Kampia wrote. He later added that if she filed a competing marijuana initiative with the secretary of state, "we will specifically launch a series of actions to harm your business, in the spirit of what social-justice movements do to boycott bad companies or bad business owners." Kampia, who did not respond to The Republic's request to discuss the dispute, wrote in his e-mail the competing initiative would not affect his group's plans. He also said his group's retaliation would be completely legal. "For example, I'm already budgeting ... $10,000 (as of Friday) to pay people for 1,000 hours of time to distribute literature outside of your front door, and the literature will not portray you in a kind way," Kampia's e-mail said. "We will not target any other dispensaries; we will only target you. (There are other legal actions I have planned, so please just assume that distributing literature will be one of four or five tactics to disrupt your business; again, this will all be legal)." Berman, now chairwoman of the Arizonans for Responsible Legalization, responded and urged Kampia to "reconsider this path." She wrote that he should work with ARL to advance that group's marijuana legalization idea. If Kampia pursues the threat, Berman wrote, "it is very likely that both MPP as an organization and you as an individual will be liable for tortuously interfering with business expectancies." She warned that her group may also pursue legal claims against his if he retaliates. The groups, she wrote, "disagreed on several" key points on the planned campaigns, most notably, the number of marijuana dispensaries that would be allowed to operate and home-grow provisions. Both groups are finalizing their initiatives. Berman wrote that the Marijuana Policy Project has proposed that its legalization initiative allow "an unlimited number of marijuana dispensaries" throughout the state. Such a proposal would be bad, she wrote, because voters "do not support such a radical departure from current law." "An incremental approach, that caps the number of dispensaries at or slightly above the current number of licensed dispensaries, is the only politically feasible approach," Berman wrote. She added that oversight and monitoring of an unlimited number of dispensaries by public officials would be impossible. Berman also wrote that the Marijuana Policy Project had proposed "a dramatic deregulation of homegrown marijuana," but speculates that voters would not support that. She wrote that it would be a mistake to have competing measures on the 2016 ballot because they would "inevitably dilute the financial resources available to the decriminalization effort in Arizona." Marijuana Policy Project officials have said their initiative might be modeled after the marijuana program in Colorado, which was approved by voters and allows adults age 21 and older to use and possess up to an ounce of pot. The marijuana is purchased at marijuana shops allowed to operate under the law. Such marijuana use remains illegal under the federal Controlled Substances Act, but in 2013 the U.S. Department of Justice said it would allow laws regulating recreational use of marijuana. Mason Tvert, Marijuana Policy Project communications director, declined to discuss Kampia's letter. However, he said, the group was disappointed that Berman left the group, saying "it came out of nowhere." Arizona is among a couple dozen states and the District of Columbia that allow marijuana use for medicinal or recreational reasons. Arizona voters approved the use of medicinal marijuana in 2010 for conditions such as chronic pain and cancer, but the program didn't gain momentum until last year, when dispensaries began to open. About 65,000 people participate in the program, and the state Department of Health Services, which oversees the program, has limited the number of dispensaries to 126 statewide. In an April 1 e-mail to people involved in the effort, Kampia wrote Berman had "misstated the facts a few times recently" and said his group would push for an "unlimited number of retail licenses." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom