News (Media Awareness Project) - US HI: Pakalolo Promoter Indicted Along With 13 Colleagues |
Title: | US HI: Pakalolo Promoter Indicted Along With 13 Colleagues |
Published On: | 2010-07-09 |
Source: | Honolulu Star-Advertiser (HI) |
Fetched On: | 2010-07-10 03:01:12 |
PAKALOLO PROMOTER INDICTED ALONG WITH 13 COLLEAGUES
Roger Christie's THC Ministry was raided, and federal authorities
took hundreds of plants
Big Island marijuana advocate Roger Christie, his partner, two
employees of the Hawaii Cannabis Ministry and 10 people who allegedly
supplied marijuana for the ministry are facing federal marijuana
manufacturing, possession and distribution charges.
A federal grand jury returned a secret indictment last month against
Christie, Sherryanne L. St. Cyr, Susanne Lenore Friend, Timothy M.
Mann, Richard Bruce Turpen, Wesley Mark Sudbury, Donald James Gibson,
Roland Gregory Ignacio, Perry Emilio Policicchio, John DeBaptist
Bouey III, Michael B. Shapiro, Aaron George Zeeman, Victoria C. Fiore
and Jessica R. Walsh.
A federal judge unsealed the indictment yesterday. The U.S. attorney
scheduled a news conference for this afternoon.
The indictment charges the defendants with possessing as few as two
marijuana plants to as many as 1,108 plants. It also seeks the
forfeiture of $21,494 that county and federal law enforcement
officials seized in a raid of the ministry's downtown Hilo offices,
and from Christie's Hilo apartment and Big Island property owned by
Turpen, Ignacio and Policicchio.
Christie and St. Cyr manufactured, distributed and sold marijuana at
the ministry assisted by ministry employees Fiore and Friend,
according to the indictment. Christie also allegedly recruited Friend
and Mann to start up a marijuana cultivation operation for the ministry.
By July 22, 2009, the operation had 284 marijuana plants under
cultivation, the indictment said.
The indictment also charges Turpen with manufacturing and possessing
with the intent to distribute 1,108 marijuana plants; Sudbury, 856
plants; Gibson, 152 plants; Ignacio, 80 plants; Policicchio, 72
plants; Bouey, 26 plants; and Shapiro, two plants.
Maximum penalties range from up to five years for distributing or
possessing any amount of marijuana to up to life in prison for
distributing or possessing more than 1,000 marijuana plants.
After Hawaii County police officers and agents from the Drug
Enforcement Administration and Internal Revenue Service raided his
home and ministry March 10, Christie said he did not mind the
experience if that was what it took to be declared legitimate.
He said he filed papers with the IRS declaring himself the minister
of THC Ministry and was confident the government was going to clear
him and return the money and records seized in the raids. (THC is
also the abbreviation for tetrahydrocannabinol, the active ingredient
in marijuana.)
Christie said he uses marijuana while providing sacrament. The THC
website says the cultivation and enjoyment of cannabis is a
fundamental human right provided by God and protected by the First Amendment.
State law allows a person who has a physician's certification to
possess and use marijuana to treat a debilitating condition.
Roger Christie's THC Ministry was raided, and federal authorities
took hundreds of plants
Big Island marijuana advocate Roger Christie, his partner, two
employees of the Hawaii Cannabis Ministry and 10 people who allegedly
supplied marijuana for the ministry are facing federal marijuana
manufacturing, possession and distribution charges.
A federal grand jury returned a secret indictment last month against
Christie, Sherryanne L. St. Cyr, Susanne Lenore Friend, Timothy M.
Mann, Richard Bruce Turpen, Wesley Mark Sudbury, Donald James Gibson,
Roland Gregory Ignacio, Perry Emilio Policicchio, John DeBaptist
Bouey III, Michael B. Shapiro, Aaron George Zeeman, Victoria C. Fiore
and Jessica R. Walsh.
A federal judge unsealed the indictment yesterday. The U.S. attorney
scheduled a news conference for this afternoon.
The indictment charges the defendants with possessing as few as two
marijuana plants to as many as 1,108 plants. It also seeks the
forfeiture of $21,494 that county and federal law enforcement
officials seized in a raid of the ministry's downtown Hilo offices,
and from Christie's Hilo apartment and Big Island property owned by
Turpen, Ignacio and Policicchio.
Christie and St. Cyr manufactured, distributed and sold marijuana at
the ministry assisted by ministry employees Fiore and Friend,
according to the indictment. Christie also allegedly recruited Friend
and Mann to start up a marijuana cultivation operation for the ministry.
By July 22, 2009, the operation had 284 marijuana plants under
cultivation, the indictment said.
The indictment also charges Turpen with manufacturing and possessing
with the intent to distribute 1,108 marijuana plants; Sudbury, 856
plants; Gibson, 152 plants; Ignacio, 80 plants; Policicchio, 72
plants; Bouey, 26 plants; and Shapiro, two plants.
Maximum penalties range from up to five years for distributing or
possessing any amount of marijuana to up to life in prison for
distributing or possessing more than 1,000 marijuana plants.
After Hawaii County police officers and agents from the Drug
Enforcement Administration and Internal Revenue Service raided his
home and ministry March 10, Christie said he did not mind the
experience if that was what it took to be declared legitimate.
He said he filed papers with the IRS declaring himself the minister
of THC Ministry and was confident the government was going to clear
him and return the money and records seized in the raids. (THC is
also the abbreviation for tetrahydrocannabinol, the active ingredient
in marijuana.)
Christie said he uses marijuana while providing sacrament. The THC
website says the cultivation and enjoyment of cannabis is a
fundamental human right provided by God and protected by the First Amendment.
State law allows a person who has a physician's certification to
possess and use marijuana to treat a debilitating condition.
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