Pubdate: Fri, 09 April 1999
Source: Capital Times, The  (WI)
Copyright: 1999 The Capital Times
Contact:  http://www.thecapitaltimes.com/
Author: NOAH ISACKSON

POLICE CHIEF LIGHTENS UP ON MEDICAL POT

ARCATA, Calif. (AP) -- Arcata's police chief walked into the house and was
escorted upstairs to a bedroom filled with marijuana plants and enough
smokable pot to fill a grocery bag.

Instead of reaching for his gun or a search warrant, Mel Brown offered a
handshake.

"I used to leave places like that with plants and prisoners," Brown said on
the way out of Jason Browne's marijuana garden. "But here, law enforcement
is holding out the olive branch to people who smoke medical marijuana."

Tucked between groves of towering redwoods and misty coastal beaches in far
northern California, Arcata, population 16,000, is getting considerable
attention for its response to Proposition 215, the 1996 voter initiative
that allows people to grow and use marijuana for medicinal purposes.

Brown personally issues photo identification cards bearing his signature to
people who register as medical marijuana patients, after confirming that
they have a doctor's recommendation.

So far, he has issued about 100 of the "stay out of jail" cards. Officers
have been instructed not to arrest pot growers or smokers who carry the ID.

Brown said he is not concerned about trouble from Attorney General Janet
Reno, who personally reminded state Attorney General Bill Lockyer last month
that Proposition 215 runs counter to federal law.

"Quite frankly, I don't see Janet Reno coming to Arcata and arresting
somebody or having her people arrest somebody," he said.

As a precaution, however, Brown keeps no record of who applies for an ID and
doesn't keep track of those who currently use a card.

One of the card holders is Browne, who smokes pot to relieve his back pain
and invited the chief to survey his crop.

During the visit, the chief listened attentively while the grower spoke of
the potency of his next harvest, and sighed sympathetically when Browne
shook some stalks and unleashed a swarm of marijuana-munching bugs.

"Jason and I were both very cautious when the program first started," said
Brown, 53. "I didn't want to be associated with black market drug dealers
and he didn't want to be associated with someone who was going to stab him
in the back. But time passed and we got over the stereotypes."

"What makes Arcata's program work is the fact that law enforcement and the
medical community are involved," said Nathan Barankin, Lockyer's spokesman. 

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