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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Marijuana Theft Brings Calls For Investigation
Title:US CA: Marijuana Theft Brings Calls For Investigation
Published On:2002-01-16
Source:Ojai Valley News (CA)
Fetched On:2008-01-24 23:46:39
MARIJUANA THEFT BRINGS CALLS FOR INVESTIGATION

Most people who grow marijuana would probably keep quiet if they got their
plants stolen. But not one Oak View woman.

Andrea Nagy has been legally cultivating cannabis in her backyard
greenhouse since she moved into her Oak View home this past May. She said
she even went to the Ojai Police Department and told them of her plans to
cultivate before she began growing. Under California's Medical Marijuana
law, she has a legal right to possess, use and grow marijuana for medical
necessity because her doctor gave his approval.

But in mid-November, Nagy and her boyfriend, Julian Gonzalez, left town for
the weekend. When they returned the following Tuesday, Gonzalez went to the
greenhouse at the back of the property to check on the plants. They were
gone, hacked off at the stalk.

In the greenhouse, Nagy and Gonzalez said they found Camel menthol
cigarette butts, pieces of black plastic garbage bag and a clipboard with a
note attached to it hanging from an extension cord that had fed power to a
1,000 watt high pressure sodium lamp.

Gonzalez recited the note from memory, it read: "Hello dips-ts, you
wouldn't have lost so much if you would've been here. There are two ways we
can handle this and they're not all bad. See you tomorrow at 3," Gonzalez
said. The note was penned in sloppy handwriting and in two different types
of ink, Gonzalez said, and was initialed with the letters, "S.P." and "T.F."

Nagy said the clipboard was a standard, pressboard style clipboard that
looked old. She said they also found hair that was not theirs. Later,
Gonzalez found more cigarette butts on the other side of the back fence
where he believes the thieves entered the property.

The wire fence at the back corner of the property had been cut and was bent
back.

Nagy said she immediately called the police and took all her evidence to
them for inspection and investigation. She also said she and Gonzalez went
around the neighborhood and asked the neighbors if they had seen or knew
anything.

One neighbor was particulary forthcoming and said they knew Nagy's plants
had been stolen on Saturday. This was now Tuesday, the week before
Thanksgiving.

That neighbor, who asked not to have their name printed, said they knew who
had taken the plants, but couldn't provide details.

They did say they had not been contacted by the police, but had spoken with
Gonzalez about the plant theft.

Ventura County Sheriff's Detective Joe Evans, who has been assigned to the
case, wouldn't comment because he said the case is still under
investigation. He did confirm that Nagy's plants were gone.

Now two months later, Nagy said she's contacted Evans twice, but hasn't
heard anything back from him.

"I feel I'm a double victim," Nagy said. "One, I was ripped off, and two, a
victim of refusal to investigate."

This isn't the first time, Nagy has had an operation shut down. She opened
a "compassion club" in a business park in Thousand Oaks 1997 and provided
medical marijuana to 60 patients. Eventually she was shut down. Ventura
County filed a $100,000 civil suit against Nagy as a public nuisance but
lost - which resulted in Nagy being given a judgment that allowed her to
grow for personal use and provide to others and be reimbursed for it. But
she decided not to reopen the club. This, however, has not curbed her
activism; she's produced a 30-minute videotape "Just Say Grow" on how to
grow medical marijuana and has her own website, www.mymarijuanagarden.com.

"I'm an activist," she said. "And I don't think patients should have to sit
on the back of the bus anymore."

Now that she's been ripped off, she says she's not tired of fighting for
her rights and others, but is tired of the mentality around here. For the
past few weekends, she's traveled to Sonoma County to check on housing and
feels the spirit there is much more open. When her lease at the property in
Oak View is up in March, she said she plans to move.
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