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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Jurors Question Their Verdict
Title:US CA: Jurors Question Their Verdict
Published On:2003-02-05
Source:Newsday (NY)
Fetched On:2008-01-21 12:14:40
JURORS QUESTION THEIR VERDICT

Say They Were Misled At Trial

San Francisco - A marijuana advocate and the jury that convicted him are
making an unexpected show of solidarity: Jurors claim they were misled, and
the defendant says it isn't them he blames.

Ed Rosenthal, the self-described "Guru of Ganja," was allowed yesterday to
remain free on $500,000 bail until his June 4 sentencing on federal drug
violations. He faces up to 85 years in prison.

Outside court, Rosenthal told supporters that he had "no regrets. ... Both
the jury and I were victims of persecution, of an illegal government action."

Jurors said they felt cheated because they weren't allowed to hear that
Rosenthal supplied Oakland's medical marijuana program, an outgrowth of a
1996 medical marijuana initiative that conflicts with federal law.

"I feel like I made the biggest mistake in my life," juror Marney Craig
said. "We convicted a man who is not a criminal."

Other jurors reached Monday agreed and planned to write to Rosenthal to
apologize.

After a two-week trial the 12-member jury unanimously concluded Friday that
Rosenthal was growing more than 100 plants, conspired to cultivate
marijuana and maintained an Oakland warehouse for a growing operation. He
was portrayed as a major drug manufacturer.

Rosenthal's defense repeatedly tried to call witnesses to testify that he
was growing marijuana for medical use. The judge denied those requests and
was backed up twice during the trial by the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals.

Legal experts said U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer had federal precedent
on his side. "A bank robber is not allowed a defense that he was stealing
money for his starving children, even if he was," said Rory Little, a
Hastings College of the Law professor.

Jury foreman Charles Sackett said he hopes Rosenthal's case is overturned
on appeal. "Some of us jurors are upset about the way the trial was
conducted ... I would have liked to have been given the opportunity to
decide with all the evidence," he said.
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