Pubdate: Wed, 15 Dec 1999
Source: Washington Post (DC)
Copyright: 1999 The Washington Post Company
Address: 1150 15th Street Northwest, Washington, DC 20071
Feedback: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm
Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/
Author: Fern Shen, Washington Post Staff Writer
Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v99/n1267/a11.html

PROBATION, FINES FOR TAKOMA COUPLE

The Takoma Park couple arrested after their daughter turned them in for
growing marijuana were in court in Rockville yesterday, where each was
sentenced to six months' probation, a $150 fine and 10 days in jail,
suspended.

During the brief hearing before Montgomery County Circuit Court Judge
DeLawrence Beard, attorneys for Katherine Marie "Kitty" Tucker and Robert
Jason Alvarez also asked for a sentence of "probation before judgment,"
meaning that the couple would wind up with no criminal record if they live
up to the terms of their probation.

Beard denied the request, but he told attorneys for the couple that they
could ask for a reconsideration and that he would review it. Both attorneys
said they would do so. The sentence he did impose resulted from a plea deal
worked out between defense attorneys and prosecutors last month.

Tucker pleaded guilty to attempted propagation of marijuana, and Alvarez
pleaded guilty to marijuana possession, both misdemeanors. The couple
originally had faced felony charges of manufacturing and conspiring to
manufacture marijuana.

Tucker and Alvarez spoke briefly in court yesterday, Tucker apologizing but
attributing her marijuana use to her medical condition, which includes
severe migraines and muscle pain. Neither made reference to the most
unusual aspect of their Aug. 30 arrest--the fact that they had been turned
in by their 16-year-old daughter, Kerry Tucker, who went to police with
photographs of the basement marijuana crop.

Some explanation for the teenager's motivations has surfaced, however, in a
memorandum written by Tucker's defense attorneys and placed into court
records yesterday.

"A family disagreement as to whether or not Kerry Tucker would be permitted
to drop out of school" prompted the girl to go to police, the memorandum
said. Those and previous defense documents describe Kerry Tucker as
learning-disabled and emotionally troubled.

But the child's mother yesterday took responsibility for what happened,
saying in the court filings that she now recognizes "the folly of
self-medication with . . . an illegal substance."

Katherine Tucker "was driven by her pain and suffering to bend the law.
That attitude, driven by her ailments, has now caused extreme upheaval in
her own family," the document said.

Police officers found 69 marijuana plants in varying stages of growth,
along with basement grow lights, marijuana stored in containers in the
master bedroom and rolling papers and other paraphernalia in the house.

Alvarez, 54, a senior policy adviser at the Department of Energy, was fired
as a result of the arrest. Alvarez, like Tucker, has a long history of
involvement in pushing for greater scrutiny of government and private
nuclear facilities, first as an activist, then as a congressional staffer
and most recently at the Energy Department. Tucker, 55, is a lawyer who was
involved in publicizing the case of nuclear power whistle-blower Karen
Silkwood.

The couple was initially ordered by a judge to have no contact with the
girl, who stayed for a time with family friends. Yesterday's sentencing
brought an end to the special conditions under which Kerry Tucker was
eventually allowed by a judge to live at home with her parents: that no one
in the household discuss the marijuana-growing or arrest.

Steven D. Kupferberg, Tucker's attorney, said yesterday that he worked out
an agreement for the return of two computers confiscated by the FBI.

"They will be returned within 10 to 30 days," Kupferberg said. "Because of
[Alvarez's] high-security clearance, they wanted to see if there was any
evidence of some threat to national security."
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