News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Pair Cry Foul Over Arrests In Court On U.S. Pot Charges |
Title: | US CA: Pair Cry Foul Over Arrests In Court On U.S. Pot Charges |
Published On: | 2004-01-17 |
Source: | Sacramento Bee (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-23 15:43:11 |
PAIR CRY FOUL OVER ARRESTS IN COURT ON U.S. POT CHARGES
The medical marijuana confrontation between California and the U.S.
government took a dramatic turn this week when two people were arrested on
federal charges as they sat in a Tehama County courtroom. David Dean
Davidson and Cynthia Barcelo Blake were waiting for their attorneys to
finish a meeting in the judge's chambers after Deputy District Attorney
Lynn Strom had announced at the Tuesday hearing that she would seek a
dismissal of charges against the pair for cultivation and possession for
sale of marijuana. When the prosecutor, who requested the meeting in
chambers, left the courtroom with the defense attorneys and the judge,
sheriff's deputies ordered the defendants into the hall, handcuffed them
and told them they were under federal arrest.
At the same time, the county prosecutor informed the judge and defense
attorneys that the pair had been indicted five days earlier by a federal
grand jury in Sacramento. When the defense attorneys rushed back to the
Corning courtroom, their clients were gone and they were informed by a
deputy that the pair were on their way to jail in Sacramento. Deputies had
taken Davidson and Blake out the back door of the courthouse and placed
them in an unmarked car. As he was being handcuffed, Davidson said, he told
a deputy he wanted to see his lawyer. "He told me, 'You don't have a lawyer.
Your case was dismissed,' " Davidson said Friday at a news conference in
front of the U.S. courthouse in Sacramento shortly before he and Blake were
arraigned on the federal charges. The pair are charged in the federal
indictment with conspiring to grow at least 1,000 plants, possessing
marijuana with the intent to distribute, and manufacturing at least 100
plants. If convicted, they face a mandatory minimum 10 years in prison.
California's 1996 Compassionate Use Act legalized medical marijuana on a
doctor's recommendation. The law has pitted state and some local officials
against federal drug agents and the current administration's zero-tolerance
pot policy. Davidson, 53, and Blake, 54, use marijuana on the
recommendation of physicians to alleviate pain, depression and insomnia,
they said. Both said they had never been arrested before their July arrest
on the state charges. Davidson is a retired businessman who lives in
Oakland. Blake worked 16 years for the Federal Reserve Bank in San
Francisco. She took disability leave in April and now lives in Red Bluff.
They appeared before U.S. Magistrate Judge Gregory G. Hollows on Wednesday
and were ordered released on $50,000 bail each. Davidson said they were
processed out of the downtown jail in Sacramento about midnight. "It was a
nightmare come true," Davidson said of the ordeal. Their attorney, J. Tony
Serra, had stronger words. Strom "knew she couldn't win," Serra asserted.
"So, she concocted this terrible, illegal, underhanded scheme to separate
David and Cindy from their attorneys and transition them into federal
jurisdiction, where she knows that medical necessity is not a defense. "The
U.S. attorney's office should never have taken this case. David and Cindy
have never sold marijuana.
They grow it strictly for their own medical use," Serra added. The veteran
defense lawyer cited a decision last month by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals -- the highest court in the West -- that personal cultivation and
use of medical marijuana in a state like California, which permits such
activities, can be outside the control of federal authorities. The
appellate court's rationale would apply to those who grow their own pot or
obtain it from local grower-caretakers without involving interstate
commerce. Serra insists that Davidson and Blake fit that profile. Tehama
County Assistant District Attorney Jonathan Skillman disputed Serra's
characterization of Tuesday's events. "Typically, this case would be taken
by the federal government because it is multijurisdictional, in that the
evidence was gathered in two counties, Tehama and Alameda," Skillman said
in a telephone interview. "And, there has been a federal presence from the
beginning.
Federal agents were involved in the search (of Davidson's residence) in
Alameda County. "There were more than 62 pounds of processed marijuana and
1,803 plants seized at the two locations.
So, we were not too concerned about any kind of medical marijuana claim.
They could have supplied the entire West Coast." The number of plants and
amount of marijuana seized is contested by Serra and two other defense
lawyers. Serra said the amount charged is "ludicrous," and was inflated to
achieve the specter of a very long sentence and "manipulate us into some
kind of plea bargain. This is a political case, and it will be fought."
Skillman confirmed the circumstances of the arrest but said the defense
lawyers' presence "would not have made a difference." Besides, he said,
Davidson and Blake had no constitutional right to counsel in the federal
case prior to their arraignment. The pair were first arrested July 29 when
Tehama County sheriff's deputies raided Blake's home in Red Bluff, where
Davidson was visiting.
When asked by officers if there was marijuana at his Oakland residence,
Davidson told them there was. "When I got home, the front door was standing
open and the place had been ransacked," he said Friday.
The medical marijuana confrontation between California and the U.S.
government took a dramatic turn this week when two people were arrested on
federal charges as they sat in a Tehama County courtroom. David Dean
Davidson and Cynthia Barcelo Blake were waiting for their attorneys to
finish a meeting in the judge's chambers after Deputy District Attorney
Lynn Strom had announced at the Tuesday hearing that she would seek a
dismissal of charges against the pair for cultivation and possession for
sale of marijuana. When the prosecutor, who requested the meeting in
chambers, left the courtroom with the defense attorneys and the judge,
sheriff's deputies ordered the defendants into the hall, handcuffed them
and told them they were under federal arrest.
At the same time, the county prosecutor informed the judge and defense
attorneys that the pair had been indicted five days earlier by a federal
grand jury in Sacramento. When the defense attorneys rushed back to the
Corning courtroom, their clients were gone and they were informed by a
deputy that the pair were on their way to jail in Sacramento. Deputies had
taken Davidson and Blake out the back door of the courthouse and placed
them in an unmarked car. As he was being handcuffed, Davidson said, he told
a deputy he wanted to see his lawyer. "He told me, 'You don't have a lawyer.
Your case was dismissed,' " Davidson said Friday at a news conference in
front of the U.S. courthouse in Sacramento shortly before he and Blake were
arraigned on the federal charges. The pair are charged in the federal
indictment with conspiring to grow at least 1,000 plants, possessing
marijuana with the intent to distribute, and manufacturing at least 100
plants. If convicted, they face a mandatory minimum 10 years in prison.
California's 1996 Compassionate Use Act legalized medical marijuana on a
doctor's recommendation. The law has pitted state and some local officials
against federal drug agents and the current administration's zero-tolerance
pot policy. Davidson, 53, and Blake, 54, use marijuana on the
recommendation of physicians to alleviate pain, depression and insomnia,
they said. Both said they had never been arrested before their July arrest
on the state charges. Davidson is a retired businessman who lives in
Oakland. Blake worked 16 years for the Federal Reserve Bank in San
Francisco. She took disability leave in April and now lives in Red Bluff.
They appeared before U.S. Magistrate Judge Gregory G. Hollows on Wednesday
and were ordered released on $50,000 bail each. Davidson said they were
processed out of the downtown jail in Sacramento about midnight. "It was a
nightmare come true," Davidson said of the ordeal. Their attorney, J. Tony
Serra, had stronger words. Strom "knew she couldn't win," Serra asserted.
"So, she concocted this terrible, illegal, underhanded scheme to separate
David and Cindy from their attorneys and transition them into federal
jurisdiction, where she knows that medical necessity is not a defense. "The
U.S. attorney's office should never have taken this case. David and Cindy
have never sold marijuana.
They grow it strictly for their own medical use," Serra added. The veteran
defense lawyer cited a decision last month by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals -- the highest court in the West -- that personal cultivation and
use of medical marijuana in a state like California, which permits such
activities, can be outside the control of federal authorities. The
appellate court's rationale would apply to those who grow their own pot or
obtain it from local grower-caretakers without involving interstate
commerce. Serra insists that Davidson and Blake fit that profile. Tehama
County Assistant District Attorney Jonathan Skillman disputed Serra's
characterization of Tuesday's events. "Typically, this case would be taken
by the federal government because it is multijurisdictional, in that the
evidence was gathered in two counties, Tehama and Alameda," Skillman said
in a telephone interview. "And, there has been a federal presence from the
beginning.
Federal agents were involved in the search (of Davidson's residence) in
Alameda County. "There were more than 62 pounds of processed marijuana and
1,803 plants seized at the two locations.
So, we were not too concerned about any kind of medical marijuana claim.
They could have supplied the entire West Coast." The number of plants and
amount of marijuana seized is contested by Serra and two other defense
lawyers. Serra said the amount charged is "ludicrous," and was inflated to
achieve the specter of a very long sentence and "manipulate us into some
kind of plea bargain. This is a political case, and it will be fought."
Skillman confirmed the circumstances of the arrest but said the defense
lawyers' presence "would not have made a difference." Besides, he said,
Davidson and Blake had no constitutional right to counsel in the federal
case prior to their arraignment. The pair were first arrested July 29 when
Tehama County sheriff's deputies raided Blake's home in Red Bluff, where
Davidson was visiting.
When asked by officers if there was marijuana at his Oakland residence,
Davidson told them there was. "When I got home, the front door was standing
open and the place had been ransacked," he said Friday.
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