Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Pubdate: Tue, 21 Apr 1998 Author: Glen Martin, Chronicle Staff Writer S.F. CANNABIS CLUB OFFICIALLY SHUT DOWN, GRAND REOPENING TODAY It could have been a scene out of ``Evita'' -- throngs of people standing on the street, shaking their fists in the air and bellowing: ``PER-ON! PER-ON!'' But they weren't screaming for Juan Peron, the charismatic Argentine dictator of the 1940s and '50s. They were screaming for Dennis Peron, the elfin, white-haired, pot-huffing director of the San Francisco Cannabis Cultivator's Club -- which until its closing yesterday was the biggest medical marijuana outlet in the country. The shuttering of the Market Street club was the result of an order issued last week by San Francisco Superior Court Judge David Garcia at the request of California Attorney General Dan Lungren. Bad blood has existed between Peron -- who authored Proposition 215, the 1996 medical marijuana initiative -- and Lungren ever since state agents busted Peron's club three months before the initiative passed. Peron tried to reassure his acolytes that yesterday's development was all for the best. ``It's been an honor to lead you, (and) this is a sad moment for me, but I'm now opening another chapter of my life,'' he said as he stood outside the club, holding one of his favorite potted marijuana plants. He had to raise his voice to make himself heard over the cheers and an impromptu dog fight that had erupted among some of his admirers' pets. Peron announced that a new club, called the Cannabis Healing Center, will open today at the site of the old club. It will be directed by 78-year-old medical marijuana advocate Hazel Rodgers, but it may face legal challenges, too. Rodgers received roars of adoration yesterday when she appeared at a second-story window of the club. She seemed comfortable in her new role. ``At my age, it doesn't matter what I say,'' said Rodgers. ``One thing I hope to do is to put a new brand of marijuana on the market called `Holy Smoke.' '' Peron said yesterday that he will have nothing to do with the management of the new enterprise and will devote himself instead to running for governor against Lungren in the upcoming Republican primary. Dressed in civilian clothes and looking somewhat harried, San Francisco County Sheriff Michael Hennessey served Peron at around 1:30 p.m. with the court order to close the club. Hennessey, a supporter of Proposition 215, said he backed medical marijuana clubs because he knew sick people who appeared to derive therapeutic benefit from the plant. ``I believe it is helpful to have well-run clubs,'' Hennessey said, adding that he also approved of Garcia's ruling because it helped clubs conform to the tenets of Proposition 215. Hennessey said he didn't know whether the new club would be legal under Garcia's order. ``I only follow the orders of the court,'' Hennessey said. ``(Garcia) ordered (Peron's) club closed on a minor point -- that he was selling to primary caregivers, as well as patients.'' Because Rodgers' club will only sell to patients, Hennessey said, ``it could quite possibly meet the letter of the law and the judge's ruling.'' San Francisco District Attorney Terence Hallinan agreed that the future of the new club is uncertain. ``I hope they can work this out, because I'd like to see those patients supplied with marijuana in a safe place rather than Dolores Park,'' Hallinan said. ``But it's a civil case rather than a criminal case, so it can't be decided definitively by a jury. . . . So it can go on a long time.'' Prior to Hennessey's arrival, Peron roamed the rooms of the cavernous building that housed his club. His mood appeared both nostalgic and melancholy. As staff members packed the last pounds of marijuana buds into a big duffel bag, Peron inspected the basement rooms where hundreds of pot plants once grew under lights. All that was left were a pile of spindly, culled plants and a box full of ``shake'' -- low-quality leaves. ``We'll leave this for the deputies to confiscate,'' he said. ``We just didn't have time to pack it all up.'' Upstairs, some of the club's 9,000 members participated in one last smoke-a-thon. The atmosphere was festive, bordering on rowdy. But some members said such uninhibited partying ultimately worked against the medical marijuana cause. ``It's true that the clubs serve as a social center for the poorer or socially marginalized members,'' said a man named Matthew, who smokes pot to ward off the nausea caused by the protease inhibitors he takes to fight HIV. ``But that's all people see in the media -- dope-smoking hippies,'' he said. ``At least half of the people who come here to buy marijuana are suit-wearing professionals like me. What isn't acknowledged is the fact that medicinal marijuana increases the productivity and tax base for this city because it lets a lot of people feel well enough to work.'' )1998 San Francisco Chronicle