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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Arrest Of Medicinal Pot User Ruled Legal
Title:US CA: Arrest Of Medicinal Pot User Ruled Legal
Published On:2000-08-04
Source:Los Angeles Times (CA)
Fetched On:2008-09-03 13:46:38
ARREST OF MEDICINAL POT USER RULED LEGAL

Court: Capping A Six-day Trial, The Jury Finds For Simi Valley Policemen
Who Apprehended A 64-year-old Man For Growing 14 Marijuana Plants.

SIMI VALLEY--In a setback to medicinal marijuana users, a jury ruled
Thursday that police acted legally when they arrested a local man--a
qualified user under state law--with growing 14 pot plants in his backyard.

Following a six-day trial and two hours of deliberations, the Ventura
County Superior Court panel announced at about 5 p.m. it had found in
favor of the Simi Valley Police Department and officers John Adamczyk
and Marvin Hodges.

The 12-member jury's unanimous decision disappointed 64-year-old Rex
Dean Jones, a retiree who sued the city for false arrest after he was
picked up in 1998 for cultivating marijuana.

Before his arrest, Jones had gone to authorities and told them he was
growing marijuana to treat symptoms of diabetes, high blood pressure,
skin cancer, back pains and migraines. He also showed authorities a
doctor's note.

Prosecutors eventually dropped criminal charges against Jones and
police returned the plants confiscated from his yard, though they were
dead. Jones was reimbursed for the loss by his insurance company.

Martin R. Berman, the city's attorney, said the case was not about
deciding how many plants a medicinal user can grow--just whether it
was a legal arrest.

"I believe this whole case was about them trying to make the law, and
suing police officers is not the way to make the law," Berman said
outside court.

"The police are relieved because they don't like being sued, because
they are just trying to serve the public."

But Jones' attorney, J. David Nick, said, "The verdict was the result
of an illegal, erroneous ruling by the judge. We will appeal it to the
highest court in the state, if necessary."

Nick's comments referred to a ruling Tuesday by Judge Kent Kellegrew,
who refused to allow a self-described marijuana expert to testify on
how many marijuana plants should be legally grown by medicinal users.

Proposition 215, the 1996 voter-approved medical marijuana initiative,
does not specify the amount of plants a user can grow, but then-Atty.
Gen. Dan Lungren, who adamantly opposed the proposition, issued strict
recommendations on cultivation.

Based on a theory by Lungren that each plant can yield up to a pound
of pot, Simi Valley police work under guidelines that could hold a
person in violation of the law if they are growing more than two plants.

Nick had argued Lungren's reasoning was wrong and that one plant
produces less than 5 ounces.

Regardless, Kellegrew told the jurors the only matter they needed to
decide was whether the arresting officers acted under the belief that
Jones was violating state law--a task that jurors said they were clear
about.

"We felt bad for Mr. Jones. We felt bad for both parties but the
attorney general's guidelines are inconsistent and we believe the
officers were following them based on what they thought those
guidelines were," said one female juror, who asked to not be identified.

The jury foreman, who also asked that his name not be used, said the
panel did not believe its job was to reconcile the vagueness of the
law with the actions of the officers.

"The police believed they were acting under the law," the foreman
said.

The decision came on the same day of another courtroom fight in a U.S.
District Court in San Francisco. In that case, attorneys for the
federal government vowed to penalize doctors who recommend pot to
patients by revoking their licenses to dispense medication.

The American Civil Liberties Union is suing the federal government on
behalf of several doctors and their patients following a threat three
years ago by federal drug policy officials to punish doctors.
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