Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Pubdate: Thu, 09 Jul 1998 Author: Maria Alicia Gaura, Chronicle Staff Writer EX-POT CLUB DIRECTOR GATHERS TOP LAWYERS Faced with criminal drug charges and a lengthy prison term, the director of San Jose's now-defunct medical marijuana club has assembled a legal ``Dream Team'' to present his defense. Attorneys Gerald F. Uelmen and Tom Nolan were formalarijuana advocate Peter Baez yesterday in a Santa Clara County courtroom. Uelmen, a law ply named to represent mrofessor and former dean of Santa Clara University School of Law, and an expert on constitutional law, has defended clients as varied as O.J. Simpson and Daniel Ellsberg. Nolan, a criminal defense attorney based in Palo Alto, is widely considered one of the best in his field. Neither attorney would comment on the case yesterday, but their appearance in the fray has sparked speculation that the Baez trial may have precedent setting potential. Baez was founder of the Santa Clara County Medical Cannabis Center that opened in early 1997 and closed May 8. The Santa Clara County District Attorney filed seven felony counts against Baez in May, charging him with selling marijuana to people lacking a doctor's recommendation, operating a drug house, grand theft and housing fraud. Before his legal troubles began, Baez had been lauded by city officials for his efforts to help create a medical marijuana ordinance in San Jose. Deputy District Attorney Denise Raabe said she expected the issues at trial to be narrowly limited to Baez's alleged drug trafficking violations. But many others in the medical marijuana movement hope the jury will be allowed to consider broader issues related to Proposition 215, which legalized medical marijuana use in California. In addition, some local attorneys speculated that prominent local officials, including Mayor Susan Hammer and former San Jose Police Chief Lou Cobarruviaz, might be called to the stand to testify about San Jose's unique marijuana dispensary law, bringing publicity to the issue. Kate Wells, a Santa Cruz attorney who worked with Uelmen to defend a marijuana club charged in federal court last year, said Uelmen is intrigued by the evolving area of drugs and the law. Uelmen is also part of the legal team currently defending six Northern California marijuana clubs in federal court. ``This is frontier law we're making here,'' Wells said. ``It's always exciting for an attorney to be in on the ground floor of breaking legal ground.'' Baez's trial, originally slated to begin Monday, has been postponed until September 28. 1998 San Francisco Chronicle Page A22 - --- Checked-by: (Joel W. Johnson)