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News (Media Awareness Project) - US WA: Marijuana Raid Raises Questions In Seattle
Title:US WA: Marijuana Raid Raises Questions In Seattle
Published On:2008-07-17
Source:Contra Costa Times (CA)
Fetched On:2008-07-22 00:14:50
MARIJUANA RAID RAISES QUESTIONS IN SEATTLE

SEATTLE -- Martin Martinez says the small, private collective and
outreach group he runs from a storefront are legal, a place for
medical-marijuana patients to get help growing the medicine they need
to manage their pain.

One of the earliest advocates for what became a voter-approved state
medical-marijuana law 10 years ago, Martinez says he hasn't handed
out pot, nor grown any in his cramped office.

But Tuesday afternoon, Seattle police, armed with a search warrant,
carted away marijuana and hundreds of private patient files, and tore
down a wall in search of a marijuana patch that didn't exist. King
County prosecutors say the raid was justified. Martinez's neighbors
have been complaining about a pervasive smell of pot, they said, so
authorities need to figure out whether Martinez has been breaking the law.

But the episode has Martinez frustrated and his attorney furious.
They accuse the police and prosecutors of being overzealous and
refusing to honor the law that is supposed to let sick people use pot
in peace. At a minimum, Martinez says, the authorities should let the
whole thing blow over -- and return his stuff.

"We're trying desperately to be legal, to stay alive and not have
these conflicts," Martinez said. "Science and law have to come to
terms, because the doctors are recommending cannabis and the police
have got to get on the same page."

Martinez, 48, suffered severe neurological damage in a motorcycle
accident in 1986. He later became one of the first people in King
County to use medical necessity as a defense against prosecution for
using marijuana.

In 1998, he helped promote the medical-marijuana initiative that
voters approved overwhelmingly. It allows people with certain serious
ailments to use marijuana if authorized by a physician.

For the past four years or so, he has operated Lifevine -- a private
collective of patients who work together to grow their own medical
marijuana -- and Cascadia NORML, a public-outreach organization that
provides ID cards to medical-marijuana patients so they can show
police that they have a legal right. He said the groups used three
different locations in the U District on Northeast 55th Street and
never had any problems.

In June, Martinez moved into the storefront on Northeast 50th Street.

One nearby business owner, who asked that her name not be published
because she's concerned someone might retaliate, said the building
immediately filled with the smell of pot. She said she hoped "the
problem would just go away," but it didn't. So she and other
neighbors complained to police.

Tuesday afternoon, Seattle police bicycle officers entered Martinez's
office after smelling pot in various parts of the building. They
called for backup and called prosecutors to obtain a search warrant.
According to Martinez, the police seized 12 ounces of marijuana buds
and a large container of the less-potent leaf called "shake," which
belonged to him and four other patients who happened to be there. And
the police took 500 confidential patient files containing people's
medical records and medical-marijuana prescriptions, Martinez said.

Martinez said one officer became convinced that Martinez was growing
a garden in a secret room, so he ripped down part of a wall.

No plants were found. Martinez wasn't arrested. No charges have been filed.
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