The following San Jose Mercury News story was published in the Conta Costa Times (6/5/97) gives photos of marijuana plants to Sant Cruz police By JOHN WOOLFOLK SAN JOSE MERCURY NEWS SANTA CRUZ Costco is watching you. That was the lesson a Santa Cruz medical marijuana club learned recently when it took photographs of its members and growing operation to the warehouse chain for processing. The club, Wo/Men's Alliance for Medical Marijuana, newly legalized under the recently passed Proposition 215, soon found itself doing some explaining to local police. Club director Valerie Corral said that when a friend went to pick up the photos, a Costco employee told her to wait 10 minutes because the equipment was broken. Moments later, the friend was summoned outside by a pair of police officers, Corral said. "I hit the ceiling," Corral said after learning of the Costco snitch." I was just furious. It's pretty outrageous that they take it upon themselves to turn people in. What right have they got to be Big Brother?" Corral said police questioned her friend for about 20 minutes. They returned photos of club members but confiscated the pictures of the growing operation and forwarded them to the sheriff's narcotics enforcement team, Police Chief Steve Beicher said. Sheriff Mark Tracy promptly ordered the remainihg photos returned to the club and dropped the matter Corral said. "He's been great," Corral said. "He's been so open and approachable and willing to resolve problems so we don't have to be treated like criminals." When called about the matter, Costco's store manager said, "Our policy is to obey the law as we understand it" and that "we are reviewing our policies." He would not give his last name and hung up. The clerk who transferred the call to him later identified him as warehouse manager David Aue. District Attorney Art Danner said a 10yearold state law requires filmprocessing companies to report photos of suspected child pornography. Private companies may report other suspected criminal activity as any citizen could without violating privacy laws, but are not bound to do so, he said. Chief Belcher said in a memo to City Ha1l that "it is not a particularly unusual situation" for photo labs to report suspected criminal activity. Police get occasional calls about photos of suspected narcotics, child molestation and beatings, he said. Corral said her club uses the photographs for record keeping and that it usually takes them to Bay Photo or Longs without any trouble. She said she'd think twice about letting Costco process her film in the future. California voters in November overwhelmingly passed Prop. 215, legalizing marijuana use to treat medical conditions under a doctor's advice. The new law is still the subject of considerable handwringing among law enforcement officials. "Proposition 215 is forcing people to think in ways they never thought of before," Corral said. "Five years ago, when I got arrested, they said go change the law Now we changed the law and we're still dealing with this nonsense. The Clinton administration has refused to honor the initiative, noting that federal law still bans marijuana use, and has threatened to prosecute doctors who recommend marijuana.