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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Mendocino County Pot Club Deliveries Run Afoul Of
Title:US CA: Mendocino County Pot Club Deliveries Run Afoul Of
Published On:2011-05-21
Source:Press Democrat, The (Santa Rosa, CA)
Fetched On:2011-05-24 06:00:44
MENDOCINO COUNTY POT CLUB DELIVERIES RUN AFOUL OF SONOMA COUNTY
SHERIFF'S DEPUTIES

Northstone Organics, a medical marijuana cooperative based in
Mendocino County, appears to be about as legitimate as such an
organization can be.

It has a Mendocino County Sheriff's permit to grow medical marijuana
as a cooperative, undergoes county inspections and its plants are
tagged with Sheriff's Office zip ties, a measure aimed at protecting
them from being seized by law enforcement.

"If what Northstone Organics is doing isn't legal, no collective or
cooperative is legal," said Mendocino County Supervisor John McCowen,
who spearheaded the county's medical marijuana permit program.

But the legal precautions, which cost the cooperative about $8,500 a
year, could not guarantee safe passage of marijuana through Sonoma County.

Daniel Harwood, 33, of Willits, and Timothy Tangney, 29, of Lucerne,
were twice stopped by Sonoma County Sheriff's deputies in October
while driving through Sonoma County on their way to deliver medicinal
pot to co-op members in the Bay Area. Both are members of the cooperative.

The two, who were stopped on consecutive days, were told they were
pulled over for traffic violations: speeding in one case and not
using a turn signal in the second instance. Deputies said the smell
of pot led them to search the vehicles, confiscate the marijuana and
issue citations to the alleged offenders.

Oakland attorney Bill Panzer, who is reprenting the two drivers, said
something else is at play.

"They've been profiling young people driving in rental cars," he said
of sheriff's deputies.

Sonoma County Assistant Sheriff Lorenzo Duenas denied the profiling allegation.

"Absolutely not," he said.

Harwood and Tangney each are facing two felony counts of
transportation of marijuana for sale and possession with intent to sell.

They were carrying about 2.3 pounds of marijuana packaged mostly in
one-ounce bags, each labeled with the names of 35 patients for whom
they were destined. The labels included price tags of approximately
$275 each, said Matt Cohen, the founder and chief executive officer
of the 1,400-member cooperative.

Everything they were doing was legal, Panzer said.

But not everyone interprets medical marijuana law the same way.

"It's extremely fuzzy," said McCowen, the county supervisor.

"I would love for direction to be given to us from either the courts
or state Legislature that gives us consistent guidelines for
transportation," said Mendocino County Sheriff Tom Allman.

Issues surrounding medical marijuana transportation, financial
compensation and dispensaries remain muddy 15 years after voters
legalized the use of marijuana for medicinal purposes, he said.

Panzer said it's clear enough to know that charges against his client
should be dropped.

Sonoma County District Attorney Jill Ravitch declined to discuss the
case but said her office respects the rights of legitimate medical
marijuana patients.

"I support safe access to medical marijuana," she said.

She also said that prosecuting marijuana cases that don't involve
violence is a low priority for her office.

Mendocino County District Attorney David Eyster said he doesn't have
enough information to comment specifically on the Northstone case.
But transporting marijuana to cooperative members is permitted under
state Attorney General medical marijuana guidelines, he said.

"Even assuming simply for the sake of argument that the guidelines
are wrong, I personally believe it is bad policy to prosecute people
who may have relied on the written policy guidelines of the
California Attorney General," he said.
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