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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Medical-Pot Advocate-Grower Gets 10 Years
Title:US CA: Medical-Pot Advocate-Grower Gets 10 Years
Published On:2009-05-19
Source:San Francisco Chronicle (CA)
Fetched On:2009-05-19 15:16:09
MEDICAL-POT ADVOCATE-GROWER GETS 10 YEARS

SAN FRANCISCO -- A medical-marijuana advocate who grew 32,000 plants
on his land in Lake County was sentenced to 10 years in prison Monday
by a federal judge who criticized the law she was applying.

"I think that amount of time is excessive, but it's not up to me,"
U.S. District Judge Marilyn Hall Patel said in sentencing Charles
"Eddy" Lepp in a San Francisco courtroom crowded with his supporters.

Patel gave Lepp until July 6 to report to prison and said she would
reconsider the sentence if Congress changed the law, which requires a
10-year term for growing at least 1,000 marijuana plants.

Lepp, 56, was arrested in 2004, after federal agents said they had
found more than 32,000 marijuana plants in gardens near his home in
Upper Lake, most of them in plain view of Highway 20.

He said the plants were all for patients who had a right to use
marijuana with their doctors' approval under California law. Courts
have ruled, however, that the state law does not bar federal prosecutions.

Lepp also said that he was a Rastafarian minister, for whom the
plants were a sacrament, and that he was growing the plants for 2,500
members of his church who were sharecroppers. Patel barred the
religious defense last year, saying Lepp could not credibly claim
that his faith compelled him to distribute thousands of plants to
unidentified parishioners.

A jury convicted Lepp in September of conspiracy and cultivation with
the intent to distribute marijuana. His lawyer, Michael Hinckley,
argued for a lesser sentence, but Patel said the 10-year term was
mandatory because the evidence showed Lepp led the operation and
supervised others.

Hinckley also argued in court papers that the sentence was "grossly
disproportional" to the crimes and that Lepp, who is in frail health,
would not survive 10 years in prison. Hinckley said Monday he would
appeal the sentence.
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