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News (Media Awareness Project) - US: US Raids Firms Selling Items Used by Pot Smokers
Title:US: US Raids Firms Selling Items Used by Pot Smokers
Published On:2003-02-25
Source:San Francisco Chronicle (CA)
Fetched On:2008-08-28 11:45:09
U.S. RAIDS FIRMS SELLING ITEMS USED BY POT SMOKERS

Ashcroft Blames Internet For Paraphernalia

Saying high times are over for those who sell pipes and bongs favored by
pot smokers, federal agents raided more than 100 homes and businesses
throughout the nation Monday, including a glass-pipe company owned by
actor-comedian Tommy Chong of Cheech and Chong fame.

The raids stemmed from the indictments of 50 people, including six in
Northern California, who face federal charges of trafficking in illegal
drug paraphernalia.

Chong -- a man whose name is virtually synonymous with recreational
marijuana use -- was not among those indicted, and he was not arrested
during Monday's raids.

But the 64-year-old actor's Chong Glass company in Los Angeles was cleared
of merchandise. A separate search of Chong's Pacific Palisades home
uncovered a small amount of marijuana, according to a federal
law-enforcement official who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Authorities called the people who were indicted some of the nation's most
popular distributors -- through storefronts, web sites and wholesale
outlets -- of the often elaborate, artistic contraptions marketed in head
shops as ostensibly "for tobacco use."

Federal grand juries in western Pennsylvania and Des Moines, Iowa, returned
most of the indictments as part of "Operation Pipe Dreams," which included
the Northern California suspects, and "Operation Headhunter," which
targeted head shops in southern Iowa. Drug Enforcement Administration
offices in several states were part of the investigation.

'Billion-Dollar Industry'

"With the advent of the Internet, the illegal drug paraphernalia industry
has exploded," said Attorney General John Ashcroft in a statement. "Quite
simply, the . . . industry has invaded the homes of families across the
country without their knowledge. This illegal billion-dollar industry will
no longer be ignored by law enforcement."

Family members of some of the Northern California suspects said they were
angered by a 6 a.m. sweep Monday in which agents raided homes, handcuffed
suspects and others, froze bank accounts and seized merchandise from shops
and warehouses.

"Why after seven years in business does this happen? Why not just approach
us?" said Fern Thomas, 29, a bookkeeper for 101 North Glass Inc. in Arcata,
Humboldt County, which sells blown-glass pipes and other products to resellers.

Thomas's fiance, Jason Vrbas, was arrested along with co-owners Ryan Teurfs
and Gabriel Watson. All three men are 29. Late Monday, the suspects were
still in custody.

Clashes Along Haight Street

Authorities have clashed with head shops -- best known in the Bay Area
along San Francisco's Haight Street and Berkeley's Telegraph Avenue -- for
decades over the sale of such items as hookahs, hand pipes and water bongs.

The debate, according to Steven Wishnia, a senior editor at High Times
magazine in New York City, centers around "this weird semantic and semiotic
definition applied to a piece of glass with a bowl at one end."

People who defend the sale of such pipes, he said, generally acknowledge
they are meant for marijuana users. But many believe it's not a
proprietor's business to predict the way a product will be used.

Chong, who made his name in shades of green with partner Cheech Marin and
last year stayed in character by playing a hippie pothead on "That '70s
Show," was shocked by raids on his business and his home, said his
publicist Brandie Knight.

"It's awful," she said. "They're talking about war and everything else, and
I can't believe they can't spend their time better. Chong Glass is artwork"
- -- it was the subject of a Hollywood art exhibit in November -- "and we've
been very careful about saying it's for tobacco use only, and you must be
18 years or older (to buy it).

"We've done everything the right way, and the government is saying there is
no right way." Asked if Chong currently smokes marijuana, Knight said, "No
comment."

Peninsula Arrests

On the Peninsula, agents arrested Waleed A. Zahrieh, 37, of Los Gatos, and
Nessar David Zahriya, 39, of San Mateo. The pair allegedly sold illegal
drug paraphernalia through businesses called Wicked Corp. and Sands of Time.

Reached Monday, Zahrieh's wife, who declined to give her name, said only
that her husband sold items for tobacco use.

In Forestville, Sonoma County, agents arrested John Matthew Patrick, 38,
who owns California Colorchangers, Inc. Its Web site,
www.colorchangingglass.com, features an array of pipes and bongs. Its cover
page states, "I agree to use the products offered herein for legal purposes
only."

On Monday, authorities refused to go into detail about their investigations
except to say they involved undercover work. They said businesses could no
longer protect themselves by posting signs or Internet warnings indicating
their products were for tobacco use only.

The suspects, if convicted, face a maximum of three years in prison, a
$250,000 fine, or both, for each count in the indictments.
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