Pubdate: Wed, 08 Sept 1999 Source: Los Angeles Times (CA) Copyright: 1999 Los Angeles Times. Contact: (213) 237-4712 Website: http://www.latimes.com/ Forum: http://www.latimes.com/home/discuss/ Author: Daniel Yi CONVICTION IS REVERSED IN MARIJUANA CASE Courts: Judges fail to rule on Prop. 215 claim of O.C. defendant that he was distributing the drug only for medical purposes. The first Orange County resident to try to use Proposition 215's medicinal-marijuana provisions as a defense to drug sale charges has won an appeals court reversal of his conviction. But in ordering a new trial for David Lee Herrick, the state Court of Appeal in Santa Ana did not address whether he had been improperly denied a defense under Proposition 215. The appellate court found instead that an Orange County prosecutor had "engaged in willful misconduct" and misled the jury during his closing argument. Even so, medicinal-marijuana advocates hailed the decision. "While it is unfortunate that the appellate court did not reach a decision on the issue of medical marijuana, which has statewide implications, it is nevertheless an important decision," said J. David Nick, a San Francisco attorney who has represented medicinal-marijuana defendants. The prosecutor, Deputy Dist. Atty. Carl Armbrust, has retired and could not be reached for comment Tuesday. The district attorney's office called Armbrust's action an "inadvertent mistake." "The jury rightfully convicted Mr. Herrick of selling marijuana, and we believe that he is guilty," spokeswoman Tori Richards said. "If this matter does come back to us for retrial, we will have to review the case to decide whether . . . we want to proceed." Herrick, who is in Soledad State Prison, could not be reached for comment, but his current attorney, Stephen Gilbert, said he was pleased with the decision. What Armbrust did was "fairly egregious," Gilbert said. Herrick, 49, a member of the Orange County Cannabis Co-op, was convicted in May 1998 on two counts of felony marijuana sale and was sentenced to four years in prison. He was arrested two years ago outside a Santa Ana motel room where, police officers said, they found seven bags of marijuana marked with the cannabis club's logo and stamped "Not for sale. For medicinal use only." The co-op was formed after the passage in 1996 of the medicinal-marijuana initiative, which made it legal for patients to grow and use marijuana with a doctor's approval. But Orange County prosecutors argued that the measure did not make the sale of marijuana legal. Herrick and other co-op members maintained they had accepted donations but had not charged anyone for the drug. Similar criminal charges later landed the founder of the club, Marvin Chavez, 42, in prison. Chavez was sentenced in January to six years for selling and transporting the drug. His conviction is being appealed. A third case involving another club member, Jack Schachter, 42, will go to trial this year. Herrick's attorney, Sharon Petrosino, had asked the trial judge to admit confiscated donation slips from the cannabis club as evidence that there were no records of the alleged sales. The judge denied the motion. The attorney, during her closing argument, used the fact that the slips were not introduced to infer that the prosecution was hiding something. Armbrust countered in his summation that the defense could have brought in the evidence itself--even though he knew the judge had barred the slips' use. In its written decision, the appellate court concluded that Armbrust's comment "undermined the defense's credibility and eroded its argument." The state attorney general's office has 40 days to file an appeal with the California Supreme Court; otherwise the case will be returned to Orange County Superior Court for a possible retrial. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart