News (Media Awareness Project) - US HI: Man In Drug Trafficking Case Turns Himself In |
Title: | US HI: Man In Drug Trafficking Case Turns Himself In |
Published On: | 2010-09-19 |
Source: | Maui News, The (HI) |
Fetched On: | 2010-09-23 15:01:38 |
MAN IN DRUG TRAFFICKING CASE TURNS HIMSELF IN
WAILUKU - The head of a Paia-based medical marijuana advocacy group
turned himself in to police Friday, three months after being
reindicted along with five others in an alleged marijuana trafficking
operation.
[name redacted], 55, who gave a Makawao address, was released after
posting $100,000 bail on a warrant resulting from a Maui County grand
jury indictment in June.
He is charged with criminal conspiracy, first- and second-degree
commercial promotion of marijuana, second-degree promotion of a
detrimental drug, first- and second-degree promotion of a harmful drug
and six counts of possessing drug paraphernalia.
The charges stem from a two-year police investigation called
"Operation Weedkiller."
By November 2008, police reported seizing hundreds of marijuana plants
and clones, processed and unprocessed marijuana, drug paraphernalia,
$14,000 cash and a vehicle as part of the investigation that centered
on the organization Patients Without Time.
[name redacted] founded and headed the group, which police
allege exploited medical marijuana laws to sell the drug to hundreds
of people.
The case against [name redacted] and the other defendants was dismissed
earlier this year after 2nd Circuit Judge Joseph Cardoza ruled there
was a flaw in the procedure used to obtain the original grand jury
indictment.
[snip]
[name redacted]'s arraignment is pending.
WAILUKU - The head of a Paia-based medical marijuana advocacy group
turned himself in to police Friday, three months after being
reindicted along with five others in an alleged marijuana trafficking
operation.
[name redacted], 55, who gave a Makawao address, was released after
posting $100,000 bail on a warrant resulting from a Maui County grand
jury indictment in June.
He is charged with criminal conspiracy, first- and second-degree
commercial promotion of marijuana, second-degree promotion of a
detrimental drug, first- and second-degree promotion of a harmful drug
and six counts of possessing drug paraphernalia.
The charges stem from a two-year police investigation called
"Operation Weedkiller."
By November 2008, police reported seizing hundreds of marijuana plants
and clones, processed and unprocessed marijuana, drug paraphernalia,
$14,000 cash and a vehicle as part of the investigation that centered
on the organization Patients Without Time.
[name redacted] founded and headed the group, which police
allege exploited medical marijuana laws to sell the drug to hundreds
of people.
The case against [name redacted] and the other defendants was dismissed
earlier this year after 2nd Circuit Judge Joseph Cardoza ruled there
was a flaw in the procedure used to obtain the original grand jury
indictment.
[snip]
[name redacted]'s arraignment is pending.
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