News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Chicoan Appeals Federal Conviction For Growing Marijuana |
Title: | US CA: Chicoan Appeals Federal Conviction For Growing Marijuana |
Published On: | 2003-10-02 |
Source: | Chico Enterprise-Record (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-24 03:28:23 |
CHICOAN APPEALS FEDERAL CONVICTION FOR GROWING MARIJUANA
SACRAMENTO - Self-proclaimed Chico medical marijuana grower Bryan Epis is
appealing his federal cultivation conviction, asserting his jury was misled
on the facts and the law .
Epis is currently serving a 10-year federal prison term for conspiring to
grow more than 1,000 marijuana plants near a school.
He is seeking a review of his case before the 9th Circuit Court of Appeal
in San Francisco, which has ruled favorably in the past on
medical-marijuana issues.
Among the core concerns raised in Epis' appeal, are whether federal drug
laws "pre-empt" Proposition 215 - the 1996 voter initiative legalizing
medicinal use of marijuana in California with a doctor's recommendation.
In a 45-page written brief, Epis' appellate lawyer argues that because
medical marijuana has "no direct or obvious effect on interstate commerce,"
federal drug laws are being "unconstitutionally applied against the
cultivation and consumption of the herb in this state.
Epis was arrested June 25, 1997, after Butte County sheriff's officers
reportedly uncovered a grow operation at the basement of his Frances
Willard Avenue home in Chico and seized 458 seedlings and plants. The home
is near Chico Junior High School.
Epis asserts through his appellate attorney, Brenda Grantland of Mill
Valley, that the government was allowed to put in "deceptively prejudicial"
evidence at his trial last year to try to prove he was part of a much
larger drug operation than actually existed.
The Chico law student also maintains that the judge erred by permitting his
jury to learn he had a prior marijuana cultivation conviction and by
employing improper factors to increase his sentence.
Epis is asking the appellate court to grant him a new trial or at least
reduce his prison term.
The prosecutor who handled the case was unavailable Wednesday and a
spokesman for the U.S. Attorney's Office in Sacramento said at this point
the government has "no comment" regarding Epis' appeal.
During his June 2002 jury trial before U.S District Judge Frank C. Damrell
in Sacramento, Epis asserted he was among four medical marijuana patients
growing pot for themselves and a now-defunct group, "Chico
Medical-Marijuana Caregivers."
The government, conversely, argued Epis was hiding behind Prop. 215 to
illegally sell the drug.
During the Chico man's trial, which drew dozens of pro-medical marijuana
protesters, Assistant U.S Attorney Samuel Wong introduced a three-page
"marketing plan" seized from the Chico defendant's computer.
One drug agent testified that the spreadsheet projected earnings within one
year of more than $4 million per week had Epis not been arrested.
Epis maintains the government deceptively excerpted the calculations from a
17-page "rough draft" proposal he had for starting up a large medical
marijuana dispensary in the Bay Area, which never got off the ground.
Not allowing Epis to place the entire document into evidence to show it was
not related to the Chico grow, denied him a fair trial, his attorney contends.
"The figures in the documents are unrealistic to the point of absurdity -
doubling each month ... and clearly relate to dispensing marijuana at a
dispensary, not growing it," Grantland argues in her appellate brief.
"The end figure (on the spreadsheet) of 100,000 members by Jan. 1, 1998,
for example, is much higher than the population of Chico and many
neighboring cities and far exceeds the total of 30,000 patients with
doctors recommendations for medical marijuana in all of California today,"
the defense attorney observed.
In arguing that the prosecution of Epis was unconstitutional, his lawyer
contends federal drug laws are aimed primarily at curtailing "interstate"
drug trafficking.
She reminded the 9th Circuit judges that in a prior ruling, they had found
that "medical marijuana, when grown locally for personal consumption, does
not have any direct or obvious effect on interstate commerce."
In her appellate brief, the attorney for the convicted Chico pot grower
argues: "Barring controlled sources of medical marijuana, such as Epis'
indoor garden," could have the opposite result Congress intended: "swelling
illicit drug trafficking by forcing ill persons onto the black market."
The government has not yet filed its own brief in the case and no date has
been set for hearing Epis' appeal.
SACRAMENTO - Self-proclaimed Chico medical marijuana grower Bryan Epis is
appealing his federal cultivation conviction, asserting his jury was misled
on the facts and the law .
Epis is currently serving a 10-year federal prison term for conspiring to
grow more than 1,000 marijuana plants near a school.
He is seeking a review of his case before the 9th Circuit Court of Appeal
in San Francisco, which has ruled favorably in the past on
medical-marijuana issues.
Among the core concerns raised in Epis' appeal, are whether federal drug
laws "pre-empt" Proposition 215 - the 1996 voter initiative legalizing
medicinal use of marijuana in California with a doctor's recommendation.
In a 45-page written brief, Epis' appellate lawyer argues that because
medical marijuana has "no direct or obvious effect on interstate commerce,"
federal drug laws are being "unconstitutionally applied against the
cultivation and consumption of the herb in this state.
Epis was arrested June 25, 1997, after Butte County sheriff's officers
reportedly uncovered a grow operation at the basement of his Frances
Willard Avenue home in Chico and seized 458 seedlings and plants. The home
is near Chico Junior High School.
Epis asserts through his appellate attorney, Brenda Grantland of Mill
Valley, that the government was allowed to put in "deceptively prejudicial"
evidence at his trial last year to try to prove he was part of a much
larger drug operation than actually existed.
The Chico law student also maintains that the judge erred by permitting his
jury to learn he had a prior marijuana cultivation conviction and by
employing improper factors to increase his sentence.
Epis is asking the appellate court to grant him a new trial or at least
reduce his prison term.
The prosecutor who handled the case was unavailable Wednesday and a
spokesman for the U.S. Attorney's Office in Sacramento said at this point
the government has "no comment" regarding Epis' appeal.
During his June 2002 jury trial before U.S District Judge Frank C. Damrell
in Sacramento, Epis asserted he was among four medical marijuana patients
growing pot for themselves and a now-defunct group, "Chico
Medical-Marijuana Caregivers."
The government, conversely, argued Epis was hiding behind Prop. 215 to
illegally sell the drug.
During the Chico man's trial, which drew dozens of pro-medical marijuana
protesters, Assistant U.S Attorney Samuel Wong introduced a three-page
"marketing plan" seized from the Chico defendant's computer.
One drug agent testified that the spreadsheet projected earnings within one
year of more than $4 million per week had Epis not been arrested.
Epis maintains the government deceptively excerpted the calculations from a
17-page "rough draft" proposal he had for starting up a large medical
marijuana dispensary in the Bay Area, which never got off the ground.
Not allowing Epis to place the entire document into evidence to show it was
not related to the Chico grow, denied him a fair trial, his attorney contends.
"The figures in the documents are unrealistic to the point of absurdity -
doubling each month ... and clearly relate to dispensing marijuana at a
dispensary, not growing it," Grantland argues in her appellate brief.
"The end figure (on the spreadsheet) of 100,000 members by Jan. 1, 1998,
for example, is much higher than the population of Chico and many
neighboring cities and far exceeds the total of 30,000 patients with
doctors recommendations for medical marijuana in all of California today,"
the defense attorney observed.
In arguing that the prosecution of Epis was unconstitutional, his lawyer
contends federal drug laws are aimed primarily at curtailing "interstate"
drug trafficking.
She reminded the 9th Circuit judges that in a prior ruling, they had found
that "medical marijuana, when grown locally for personal consumption, does
not have any direct or obvious effect on interstate commerce."
In her appellate brief, the attorney for the convicted Chico pot grower
argues: "Barring controlled sources of medical marijuana, such as Epis'
indoor garden," could have the opposite result Congress intended: "swelling
illicit drug trafficking by forcing ill persons onto the black market."
The government has not yet filed its own brief in the case and no date has
been set for hearing Epis' appeal.
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