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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Feds, LAPD Freeze Berkeley Pot Club's Assets
Title:US CA: Feds, LAPD Freeze Berkeley Pot Club's Assets
Published On:2007-08-01
Source:Oakland Tribune, The (CA)
Fetched On:2008-01-12 00:52:54
FEDS, LAPD FREEZE BERKELEY POT CLUB'S ASSETS

Council Members Call for New Laws to Protect Marijuana Businesses

BERKELEY -- A city-sanctioned medical marijuana dispensary had its
assets frozen this week, prompting some city council members to call
for new city laws protecting such businesses.

The Berkeley Patient Group was notified Monday that its bank account
was frozen by the Los Angeles Police Department during a joint
operation with the Drug Enforcement Agency. The operation targeted
about 10 dispensaries in Los Angeles, including the California
Patients Group, a sister organization to the Berkeley-based business.

The frozen accounts prevent the group from accessing cash it had
saved to pay state sales taxes.

"We are a legally licensed dispensary, to be targeted like this is
absurd," said Debby Goldsberry, spokesperson for the group. "They
snuck in quietly and took all of our assets. We want them back."

The asset freeze appears to be connected to a raid of Los
Angeles-based dispensaries conducted by the DEA last week, said Sarah
Pullin, a spokesperson for the DEA-Los Angeles.

"They are associated with one of the ones we served last week,"
Pullin said. "I know they are in the process of freezing assets to
eventually seize assets."

A spokesperson at the Los Angeles Police Department said no one was
available to comment.

Pullin said she could not comment on how much money was seized or
what was found during the raids in Los Angeles because the warrants
remain under court seal.

Goldsberry said the group wants its money back because it serves a
public health need and is legal under state and city laws.

The Berkeley Patients Group serves more than 5,000 medical marijuana
clients in Berkeley and Oakland. It is one of three legalized
dispensaries in the city and also provides community services such as
a hospice and free delivery of organic fruit and vegetables to hospice clients.

City Council member Kriss Worthington said the city should do all it
can to protect the group and the two other dispensaries now operating
in the city.

Although no city has ever devised a legal strategy to combat federal
laws against the use of marijuana for medical purposes, Worthington
said Berkeley should work to do all it can.

"We're not sure what we can do that will give us meaningful
protection, but we want to make sure it has some chance of protecting
the club," he said. "There is a whole lot of other, better things the
DEA can be doing with taxpayer money."

Worthington was joined by council members Darryl Moore and Max
Anderson in calling for a new city ordinance.

Meanwhile, Goldsberry said the group will try to appeal to the DEA's
"human side" to get its money back.

"We are doing the best we can to serve the patient community that
depends on us," she said. "We need to send a strong message from our
community that the DEA is not welcomed here."
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