Pubdate: Thu, 25 Jun 1998 Source: NewTimes (CA) Section: The Shredder Contact: Website: http://newtimes-slo.com/shrdnow.html IF YOU GOT 'EM, SMOKE 'EM THE POT LEGALIZATION CROWD HASN'T had much to celebrate lately. Nobody in law enforcement seems to care much about Prop. 215, the medical marijuana initiative that y'all passed in 1996. Of course, no one's policing the police, so they can do whatever they want. Meanwhile, the golden savior of grass growers everywhere, Dennis Peron, got the 1.3 percent that any blithering fool deserves in the governor's race in June. And those votes probably came from the astute voters who thought he was Evita's husband. The vigilant red eye of the legalization movement finally glimpsed a glimmer of good news this week, though. Seems a judge in Simi Valley ordered the Simi Valley fuzz to return 13 marijuana plants they ripped from the back yard of Dean Jones, a diabetic who had a note from his doctor to smoke pot. Jones headed straight to the Simi Valley Police evidence room, where they handed him some brown paper bags. He said he only got 10 of his 13 plants back. We can only guess what may have happened to the other three. Lost in the shuffle, probably. The plants he did get back hadn't been dried properly. In fact, they hadn't been dried at all. The cops just ripped them out of the ground and stuffed them in bags, so they emerged as moldy balls of decaying muck. Jones is happy that he can go home and grow more pot without fear, but he's decided to seek revenge on the cops who killed his garden and stuffed him in the slam for 14 hours. He's suing them for $4,000 per plant. That may seem like a lot of money, but it happens to be the value placed on the plants by the cops themselves. The police have been attaching inflated values to confiscated marijuana for years. They use some absurd formula in which each sprout equals 2.5 pounds. That way they look good when sycophantic police reporters write about their big busts in the paper: "COPS SEIZE $250,000 IN POT!" a typical headline screams. It's only when you read the small print that you find out they snatched a baggie of stems and seeds from some high school kids. Maybe their outrageously inflated values will come back to bite them where it hurts. Of course, if they have to pay, it's really the rest of us who have to pay for this kind of tomfoolery. But, hey, it could set an interesting precedent. Either plaintiffs in these kinds of cases will win big bucks, or else headlines will start shouting, "COPS SEIZE DIDDLY SQUAT POT!" And I bet police departments that want to avoid lawsuits will have to take better care of the pot plants they confiscate. Tin foil will appear on the walls of police evidence rooms, with high-pressure lights dangling from the ceilings and buckets of water and fertilizer nearby. God knows they've already got the equipment. - --- Checked-by: Melodi Cornett