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News (Media Awareness Project) - US OR: Medicinal Marijuana Crimes On The Rise
Title:US OR: Medicinal Marijuana Crimes On The Rise
Published On:2008-10-21
Source:News-Times (Forest Grove, OR)
Fetched On:2008-10-28 22:09:49
MEDICINAL MARIJUANA CRIMES ON THE RISE

Sheriff Tests Law On Keeping Site Locations Confidential

Crimes in Washington County associated with medical marijuana grow
sites are on the rise -- including armed robberies and assaults --
but if you're like most people, you didn't have any way of knowing this.

Until now.

That's because the Washington County Sheriff's Office recently
decided it would change its interpretation of the state's 10-year-old
medical marijuana law and release information, previously deemed to
be confidential, about participants in the medical marijuana program
who break the law under the Oregon Medical Marijuana Act.

The move has raised eyebrows from some medical marijuana advocates
who say the county law enforcement officials are overstepping their
bounds and possibly breaking the law themselves.

The Oregon Medical Marijuana Program keeps a confidential list of
people who are sanctioned to grow a limited number of marijuana
plants for medicinal purposes. Oregon law (ORS 475.331) states:

"Authorized employees of state or local law enforcement agencies that
obtain identifying information from the list as authorized under this
section may not release or use the information for any purpose other
than verification that a person is a lawful possessor of a registry
identification card or the designated primary caregiver of a lawful
possessor of a registry identification card or that a location is an
authorized medical marijuana grow site."

The sheriff's office concedes that its new policy may violate that
law. Sgt. David Thompson, sheriff's spokesman said the office is
taking the possibly contentious step in order inform the public about
an increasing number of illegal marijuana grows associated with the
program and to bring to light the possible dangers involved with
having a medical marijuana grower in your neighborhood.

"We haven't changed the way we are operating or doing business in
terms of the way we are prosecuting or dealing with Oregon Medical
Marijuana Program growers," Thompson said. "What we are changing is
the information that we are releasing to the public. We feel the
public has a right to know when people are committing crime."

Last month over 2.5 pounds of marijuana and growing equipment were
seized by the Westside Interagency Narcotics Team at the Aloha home
of an OMMP participant.

While detectives were searching the house, the sheriff's office
reports, numerous people showed up to the home looking to buy
marijuana, which is illegal under the OMMA. Five arrests were made
and a shotgun was seized from the home.

It didn't stop there.

While the WIN Team was leaving the home they were called to another
Aloha OMMP participant residence that was reported to have a large
marijuana grow. The WIN Team found 39 more marijuana plants than is
allowed under OMMA law as well as six pounds of dried marijuana, much
more than the 1.5 pounds of dried marijuana that is allowed.

Another recent OMMP related area crime involved a group of masked
suspects, two of whom were carrying guns, who burst into the home,
demanding money and marijuana. The occupants of the house were then
assaulted by the assailants.

Thompson said in most cases the home invasions or robberies at OMMP
grower homes were committed by acquaintances and many of the
properties were themselves operating outside the growing guidelines of the act.

Specific statistics on OMMP related crimes are not available, Thompson said.

However, a map (viewable at
www.co.washington.or.us/sheriff/media/photos/medmj5.jpg) posted on
the sheriff's office web site shows the general locations of 26 homes
in Washington County where OMMP patients, caregivers or growers where
drug arrests or warrants were made in the last year.

The map refers to two sites in the rural Gaston area and three sites
outside of Banks. The highest concentration of sites is in Aloha, an
unincorporated urbanized area between Hillsboro and Beaverton.

As of July Oregon has 19,646 medical marijuana patients. The OMMP,
which administers the medical marijuana act, does not have a tally of
growers. Nor does it police its participants or provide oversight of
marijuana grows after they initially approve them.

The sheriff's office has received support from other law enforcement
agencies for their decision, according to Thompson, but not everyone
is applauding.

Leland Berger, an Oregon criminal defense lawyer who helped draft the
medical marijuana act, said that if the sheriff's office was honestly
concerned about violence associated with the medical marijuana
program they should teach OMMP participants how to protect themselves
from burglary and other crimes.

Berger thinks releasing names and addresses of medical marijuana
users and growers, even if they are arrested, is against the law and
can't understand why the sheriff's office would do so.

"There isn't any public safety reason to do that and they know it," he said.

Berger said there is a perceived bias against medical marijuana
coming from the sheriff's office.

Earlier this year Berger represented three men who were denied
concealed weapons permits by Sheriff Rob Gordon. The sheriff argued
that federal law prohibits drug users from possessing firearms.

In May, a judge disagreed with that logic and ordered Gordon to
approve the permits for the men. That ruling was appealed in June by
the Washington County Board of Commissioners.

Berger said those actions have created a hostile environment for
medical marijuana participants living in the county.

"Rob Gordon, and whoever else is making policy decisions, decided
that for reasons which escape me that somehow it's a blight on the
community," he said. "That somehow things were better when patients
were prosecuted."

Thompson, however, said the sheriff's office is not against medical marijuana.

"There are people that this act helps," he said. "What we are talking
about here are the people that are abusing the system."
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