News (Media Awareness Project) - US HI: Woman Reimbursed For Stolen Pot Plants |
Title: | US HI: Woman Reimbursed For Stolen Pot Plants |
Published On: | 2003-07-25 |
Source: | Honolulu Star-Bulletin (HI) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-19 18:31:30 |
WOMAN REIMBURSED FOR STOLEN POT PLANTS
A Hilo Resident Using Medical Marijuana Filed An Insurance Claim After A
Theft
HILO -- When Tammy VanBuskirk of Hilo discovered her four medical marijuana
plants stolen in May, she did what most people would do in case of a theft:
She reported the crime to police.
Then she filed a claim with her homeowner's insurance company.
VanBuskirk hasn't heard from the police since May. But about a week ago, she
heard from the insurance company.
American Reliable Insurance Co., of Scottsdale, Ariz. sent her a check for
$2,040.31. The paperwork with the check noted, "Pot plants policy limit $500
per plant."
The extra $40.31 was for miscellaneous expenses, VanBuskirk said.
The biggest plant was 7 feet high and 8 feet wide, she said. She didn't
intend to grow a whopper when she planted it in her garden.
"It just kept getting bigger every day," she said.
VanBuskirk, 57, said two male suspects came over the wall at the back of her
yard one afternoon and swiped some of the plants while being watched by the
7-year-old son of VanBuskirk's gardener.
They came back the same evening and swiped the rest.
"I felt, and I still do feel, so violated. I don't feel safe anymore," she
said.
VanBuskirk said that she enjoys her marijuana medicine, which is legal with
a state medical marijuana card, but it's not as if she wants to be a
pothead.
"I'm not a person who was ever into drugs or alcohol," she said. "I'm a
reverend. I marry people."
Living on Whidby Island in Washington in the mid-1990s, she was diagnosed
first with diabetes, then with glaucoma, a disease in which pressure builds
inside the eyes, killing nerve cells and causing blindness.
Although doctors warn that glaucoma does not usually cause pain as a warning
signal, VanBuskirk says the disease is painful to her.
"Glaucoma does cause pain. Anything that's killing nerve endings in your
body has to be uncomfortable," she said.
Her daughter, on the board of the Washington State Hemp Initiative,
recommended marijuana to her.
VanBuskirk also takes standard prescription medicines twice a day.
After a year of using marijuana in Washington, her doctor told her there was
no further deterioration of her vision. He said he did not know if the
marijuana was really helping her or if she just thought it was helping.
When VanBuskirk moved to Hilo four years ago, she did not tell her new
doctor that she was using marijuana.
VanBuskirk has been advised to take marijuana every two hours. She smokes it
in a tiny pipe.
The instructions on her marijuana from the Green Cross Patient Co-op in
Washington say, "Cannabis. Do not drive or operate machinery while using
this medication."
"We know that it can impair you a little like any medicine that relieves
pain," she said. "I control it. It doesn't control me."
A Hilo Resident Using Medical Marijuana Filed An Insurance Claim After A
Theft
HILO -- When Tammy VanBuskirk of Hilo discovered her four medical marijuana
plants stolen in May, she did what most people would do in case of a theft:
She reported the crime to police.
Then she filed a claim with her homeowner's insurance company.
VanBuskirk hasn't heard from the police since May. But about a week ago, she
heard from the insurance company.
American Reliable Insurance Co., of Scottsdale, Ariz. sent her a check for
$2,040.31. The paperwork with the check noted, "Pot plants policy limit $500
per plant."
The extra $40.31 was for miscellaneous expenses, VanBuskirk said.
The biggest plant was 7 feet high and 8 feet wide, she said. She didn't
intend to grow a whopper when she planted it in her garden.
"It just kept getting bigger every day," she said.
VanBuskirk, 57, said two male suspects came over the wall at the back of her
yard one afternoon and swiped some of the plants while being watched by the
7-year-old son of VanBuskirk's gardener.
They came back the same evening and swiped the rest.
"I felt, and I still do feel, so violated. I don't feel safe anymore," she
said.
VanBuskirk said that she enjoys her marijuana medicine, which is legal with
a state medical marijuana card, but it's not as if she wants to be a
pothead.
"I'm not a person who was ever into drugs or alcohol," she said. "I'm a
reverend. I marry people."
Living on Whidby Island in Washington in the mid-1990s, she was diagnosed
first with diabetes, then with glaucoma, a disease in which pressure builds
inside the eyes, killing nerve cells and causing blindness.
Although doctors warn that glaucoma does not usually cause pain as a warning
signal, VanBuskirk says the disease is painful to her.
"Glaucoma does cause pain. Anything that's killing nerve endings in your
body has to be uncomfortable," she said.
Her daughter, on the board of the Washington State Hemp Initiative,
recommended marijuana to her.
VanBuskirk also takes standard prescription medicines twice a day.
After a year of using marijuana in Washington, her doctor told her there was
no further deterioration of her vision. He said he did not know if the
marijuana was really helping her or if she just thought it was helping.
When VanBuskirk moved to Hilo four years ago, she did not tell her new
doctor that she was using marijuana.
VanBuskirk has been advised to take marijuana every two hours. She smokes it
in a tiny pipe.
The instructions on her marijuana from the Green Cross Patient Co-op in
Washington say, "Cannabis. Do not drive or operate machinery while using
this medication."
"We know that it can impair you a little like any medicine that relieves
pain," she said. "I control it. It doesn't control me."
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