Pubdate: Thu, 5 Nov 1998 Source: Sacramento Bee (CA) Copyright: 1998 The Sacramento Bee Contact: http://www.sacbee.com/about_us/sacbeemail.html Website: http://www.sacbee.com/ Author: John D. Cox NEW MENDOCINO SHERIFF, DA DOWNPLAY POT USERS In a region noted for its passionate and sometimes quirky politics, Mendocino County voters may have outdone themselves in 1998. They elected a law enforcement team Tuesday that favors decriminalizing marijuana, including a district attorney who spent nine months in federal prison for failing to pay federal income taxes. The election of a sheriff who downplays marijuana may not come as a surprise in a county with two generations of pot growers in the mountains, but the victory of Norman Vroman, 62, a Ukiah defense attorney, over incumbent District Attorney Susan Massini, 55, was an upset by any standards. "The people were ready for a change," said Vroman, who garnered about 52 percent of the vote. "They were fed up with the incumbent." In the June primary, Massini was the top vote-getter with 44 percent of the vote, to 30 percent for Vroman. In Tuesday's runoff, a politician in Massini's position -- she's been in office 12 years -- would expect to pick up the majority she needed from among the 26 percent of June voters who voted for losing conservative candidate Al Kubanis. Particularly against someone with Vroman's record. "I don't have a felony record," the victor emphasized Wednesday, noting that he could not practice law in California or be a candidate for political office under such circumstances. "It was a misdemeanor conviction." Vroman said he failed to pay income taxes for about five years in the 1980s, but as far as he is concerned, "I didn't break any law." "It had to do with a principle rather than the IRS or money or anything else," he said. "The principle is that there was no law that requires me to file a return." When he demanded to see the law, "a federal judge told me, 'We don't have to do that,' and it was a downhill slide after that." The downhill slide included nine months in a federal prison in 1992 and two personal bankruptcy filings, the last in 1994. But all of that is "old news" dredged up by his political opponents, Vroman said. "The people of Mendocino County saw through this smoke screen put up by the incumbent," he said. "My qualifications as a trial attorney are outstanding. I know what I'm doing. I'm going to be in the courtroom, a hands-on prosecutor. I look forward to it. It's obvious the people agreed with me." Vroman's stance as a tax protester struck a chord in a county with a long political history of anti-government, rural independence, and where marijuana is the county's largest cash crop. The sheriff-elect is Tony Craver, a sheriff's lieutenant who polled 58 percent of the vote in the race to succeed retiring sheriff Jim Tuso. Craver said Wednesday he and Vroman have not discussed their common view that marijuana ought to be decriminalized, but both are bound to uphold the law. "My attitude is going to be, as long as marijuana is illegal, I will not discourage deputies from enforcing the marijuana law," he said. "I don't smoke marijuana and I don't advocate it and I'm not in favor of it," said Craver, but decades of eradication efforts and other laws have not succeeded and are drawing time and resources from drug problems that Mendocino County residents find more threatening. "I would certainly emphasize the methamphetamine problem and hope the deputies would spend their time doing that instead of going after people who are smoking pot," said Craver. "We can't ask deputies not to enforce the marijuana law, but it's not going to be a high priority." - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry