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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Web: A Peek Behind the Rosenthal Grand Jury Veil:
Title:US CA: Web: A Peek Behind the Rosenthal Grand Jury Veil:
Published On:2003-02-04
Source:DrugWar (US Web)
Fetched On:2008-01-21 12:46:18
A PEEK BEHIND THE ROSENTHAL GRAND JURY VEIL: MANIPULATION RAMPANT

Groping for an indictment of Ed Rosenthal
http://www.green-aid.com/edrosenthal.htm
from a California grand jury
veering out of control, Assistant U.S. Attorney George L. Bevan, Jr sought
some reply to a rebellious grand juror who'd just argued that most of the
jury had probably voted for the state's 1996 medical marijuana initiative.
Said this official of a federal government currently running roughshod all
over California, "Whatever, that's good."

And then this federal prosecutor admitted: "The fact of the matter is it
allows marijuana for your personal use and - to be cultivated, and if you
are the primary caregiver."

Had Bevan made such a statement during Rosenthal's actual trial, U.S.
District Judge Charles Breyer would have immediately stifled him.

At another point Bevan added, "the supply side of the equation, okay, is
not protected under California law. The only thing that's covered is if you
can grow your own - okay? Or you're sick, and there's some criteria, as you
all know, that certain diseases are specified, like cancer." Along with the
specified illnesses, there's also a provision for doctors' open-ended
recommendations.

Having sought to reassure the grand jury with that, Bevan later told it,
though he noted the law forbids it, "[A]t least in the environment in this
district, probably nothing would happen to you. If you go in right now with
a card in the Cannabis clubs, you know, you're probably okay."

You're okay for the next week or month maybe, or as long as you can find a
club open and with some medicine in stock.

Decrying what he views as the misperception that "somehow Prop. 215 gave a
free pass to a lot of activity," Bevan asserted that "you look at the
conduct that's specifically protected, it's fairly narrow...." His boss,
also a federal official, might feel that no conduct, narrow or broad is
protected, but let them sort it out.

Jon Pickette, the Drug Enforcement Administration agent ostensibly
testifying in response to Bevan's questions - though at times Bevan seemed
reluctant to yield the floor - tried to rescue Bevan, soon reminding the
grand jury: "And also, I think it's important to mention that under Prop.
215, you cannot sell marijuana. And despite all of that, it's still against
federal law."

With perfect timing, a juror immediately complains: "Well, you can
understand our confusion then."

In the teeth of Bevan's reply that there's no cause for confusion, one
juror tries to help, saying that while the clubs might be "allowed to
operate in our, what we call, 'liberal' cities," someplace like Bakersfield
would draw the line.

As Bevan's joke about the "founding fathers in Bakersfield" - though why
he's bringing up the long departed I don't know - no doubt falls flat, DEA
Agent Pickette attempts another rescue. He reminds the grand jury: "And I
think that another important point is that it is against federal law, and
there's a recent Supreme Court decision," etc.

At another point, one grand juror summarized their conundrum neatly. If
state law, this juror asked, established the clubs "to provide medicinal
marijuana to people who get an okay from some public entity to go in and
buy doses of marijuana - where are these Cannabis clubs supposed to acquire
their inventory for disbursement?"

Saying that Rosenthal had been growing pot in the middle of Oakland, this
juror added: "They don't seem to be hiding anything."

(Indeed, Rosenthal had a city inspector come by to check his wiring.)

Bevan leaped in, saying, "Let me answer that question. It's a good
question." And, after his endorsement of Prop. 215 that began this article,
he stated that "a cannabis club does not have the authority under state law
to distribute Cannabis or marijuana."

(Technically that's true: only patients and their caregivers are exempt
under 215. They have interpreted that to mean they can join together in
clubs to facilitate obtaining medicine.)

The U.S. Attorney's office declined comment beyond the legal papers cited
below.

Public Lamentations

Unlike grand jurors, regular jurors can't ask questions. But, when they
actually learn the truth outside the halls of justice, they can protest.
Though overawed by the majesty of the federal trial of pot botanist Ed
Rosenthal in San Francisco, several jurors, including the foreman, will
call today publicly for a new trial, charging they were misled into
convicting him. As juror Marney Craig told Alternet's Ann Harrison, "What
happened was a travesty, and it's unbelievable, unbelievable that this man
was convicted. I am just devastated. We made a terrible mistake, and he
should not be going to prison for this."

Such novel public lamentations please reporters, but they come a day late
and more than a dollar short for Rosenthal. Yet the drug-reform community
should not castigate these citizens too harshly. For odd as it may seem to
patients dependent on medical marijuana to ease their pain, these jurors,
regular folks - noncombatants in the war on drugs - truly had no knowledge
of who Rosenthal is.

Said Keith Stroup, Executive Director of the National Organization for the
Reform of Marijuana Laws, "There's was enormous good will for Ed. But if
jury nullification didn't work for him, I don't think it's much of an
option beyond a patient who's just growing a couple of plants. After all,
the judge is sitting up there on an elevated platform with the American
flag behind him, telling jurors when they can come and go. It takes a
strong-willed individual." He added that any strategy from here on out has
to reflect the fact that "the feds are playing hardball."

Judge Breyer's stranglehold on the truth had them believe he was a big-time
drug dealer, in it solely for the money. Never mind the inconvenient fact
that the city of Oakland had officially charged the well-known cultivation
columnist and advocate with growing medicine so spastic patients in
wheelchairs wouldn't have to risk arrest on street corners seeking
expensive and maybe ineffectual pot.

(Agent Pickette told the grand jury that while the street price for the pot
Rosenthal was supplying patient dispensaries was "about $6600 per pound on
the street market," he was actually supplying it for "right around $3200.")

Castigate these citizens not, led by the nose as they were. As regular
juror, Marney Craig, told Harrison, "I didn't know what would happen to us
if we didn't follow the rules, how much trouble I would get into." She
added, "I was totally intimidated into going along with the verdict because
I didn't see any other way."

Unlike Craig and her eleven colleagues, back last February - following the
raid commemorating DEA chief Asa Hutchinson's descent that day on San
Francisco - the grand jurors deciding on whether to unleash a federal
prosecution on Rosenthal got to poke their noses into things - or at least
ask some questions.

One thing they worried about was where that wheelchair-bound soul who can't
grow her own would get her medicine.

One grand juror expressed confusion about just where patients with "one of
the four classifiable diseases to use it medicinally" were to get their
medicine. She was following Bevan's lead regarding, as he put it, "certain
disease are specified, like cancer."

Remarkably enough, this visionary assistant U.S. attorney cited a judge's
opinion which, "from what I can recall, he mentioned getting it overseas."
That not quite sounding right in his ears, Bevan trailed off marvelously:
"I think there's a reference there. And it's - he had a couple of - you
know, I guess it was just brainstorming on his part."

Seeking to reassure any jurors concerned about pain and suffering, Bevan
asked, "Is it correct, Agent Pickette, that when a narcotics search takes
place, they would actually leave a certain number of plants there?"

Without choking, Pickette replied, "Right, they would leave some."

Tell that to Valerie Corral, whose garden was destroyed last fall.

Indicating that Rosenthal himself was the target, Bevan added, "We have not
sought to shut down the operations of the club. Indeed, from as near as
I've heard -"

And Pickette pipes up: "It is open and operating." Bevan concurs.

Rosenthal attorney William M. Simpich laughed at that, telling me the feds
seized just about everything, including cannabis and patient records,
inside the Harm Reduction Center and left the doors gaping open for
squatters to move in and take over.

As Pickette testified regarding the fact that the marijuana was, in fact,
sold (albeit he'd stated previously, at less than half the street price), a
grand juror asked, "For medical reasons, though, right?"

And Pickette answered affirmatively.

Said another juror back last February: "It seems these people [the
defendants] thought they were growing this under some cover of legitimacy
from the state."

The DEA agent testifying replies: "Yes." Best it was to keep it short.

Referring to another criminal case, Bevan told the grand jury that,
following the Supreme Court decision on the federal lack of a medical
necessity defense, that, "the judge excluded any reference to why the
plants were being grown ... the 'why' that plants are being grown is
irrelevant under federal law." Bevan stated that this other defendant tried
to raise a medical defense, "and I objected and that objection was
sustained. But it was out there. I can't speak for the jurors as to what
they figured out, but -."

Realizing he was treading on shaky ground, Bevan interrupted himself to
add: "And I would submit to you, not that - and I would tell you don't be
persuaded in any sense by - by that example [of the medical defense], other
than I'm trying to answer honestly whether this case blazes trails."

Nationwide press coverage, including a stinging editorial condemning the
conviction in today's New York Times (2/4/03)
http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v03.n177.a05.html , would indicate the
Rosenthal case's importance.

Seeking to direct matters away from medicine and towards the view that
Rosenthal is a common, mercenary drug dealer, Bevan immediately promulgated
the notion that "we prosecute growers." And, "most of the growers we have
in our inventory [for Bevan's is indeed a business - larger and more
powerful and better armed than most, but a business nonetheless] are up in
the boondocks, they're in Mendocino, Humboldt County...."

Then, tying Rosenthal to such feral, outlaw grows, Bevan then discussed one
of his products: "Humboldt Hash."

Never mind that Rosenthal was growing out of a warehouse in Oakland near
City Hall.

Duly convinced, one grand juror helpfully connected the dots: "What's
different about this case is that, you know, simply the venue. These people
are in the Bay Area; they're not up in Mendocino and Humboldt County."

Another juror demurred: "I mean, it's located on a city street at a
business location...."

A (Doomed?) Motion to Dismiss

Transcripts of the grand jury proceeding surfaced when the government felt
the need to call Agent Pickette to the stand, thus opening up his
testimony, along with Bevan's commentary - or co-testimony - to the defense.

Having obtained it last week, the defense filed a motion dated 1/28/03 to
dismiss the grand jury indictment. Failing that, it requested the entire
grand jury transcript be made available. It requested a delay in the
proceedings, but Judge Breyer indicated that he could rule on the defense
motion even after the jury returned its verdict. During the trial the judge
emblazoned his view in neon letters writ large across the sky, therefore
his ruling might be anticipated. But the defense feels the grand jury
proceedings do add to what they consider already ample grounds for appeal.

As to the defense motion to dismiss filed by attorneys Robert V. Eye and
William M. Simpich, it states that, "Otherwise, any reasonable prosecutor
knew that this grand jury would never indict Mr. Rosenthal," it argued that
"the prosecutor led the grand jurors to believe" a number of legal fictions.

Rosenthal's lawyers asserted that the prosecutor, with his talk of leaving
plants behind and not shutting clubs down, pretended patients maintained
access to their medicine. Such testimony "was designed to lead the jurors
to falsely believe that federal law offered a 'shelter' for patients and
small caregivers."

As indicated above, the defense asserted that the government seized the
resources the Harm Reduction Center used to operate. (Rosenthal had been
growing medicine for HRC under the auspices of the City of Oakland.) And
the government left the HRC doors open so that squatters moved in. The
center was no longer operable.

They also charged that Bevan never indicated to the grand jury that federal
law "trumped" state law. As the motion states, "The prosecutor sowed
confusion about the role of federal and state laws in order to ensure he
got an indictment." Additionally, "His message on state law made it sound
like federal and state law were in harmony, and that the Defendant was
liable under either theory." Obviously that was not the case under
California law.

In addition, Simpich and Eye contended that Bevan "made it sound like the
patients were protected." They cite his statements regarding the
prosecution of growers and the law against distribution, not possession.

And, they charged, the prosecutor implied that some sort of medical defense
would be available to the defendant. (For his part, Agent Pickette was
pretty declarative about federal law and the Supreme Court ruling against a
federal medical necessity defense.)

What's more, the defense contended that Bevan actually acted as an unsworn
witness and that, "Such an action is even greater error when the prosecutor
testifies and then remains in the grand jury room as the presenting attorney."

Eye and Simpich's motion added that, whether sworn or unsworn, such
testimony is even worse "when the prosecutor-witness misstates the facts -
as occurred here with the prosecutor's claim that there was no 'shutdown'
of the Harm Reduction Center; the reference that the HRC was 'Rosenthal's
club'; and Mr. Bevan's statement that codefendant [Ken] Hayes was acquitted
due to [San Francisco District Attorney Terence] Hallinan's testimony and
feigning surprise at the use of a 'medical defense.'"

Summing up, they quoted prior case law from a 1998 case (United States v.
Siriprechong N.D. Cal. 1998): "that courts have the authority to dismiss an
indictment that is the product of a grand jury process so flawed that the
grand jury's independence has been infringed." Finally, quoting another
case, (United States v. Sigma Intern., Inc. 11th Cir 2001) "the ultimate
issue is not the propriety of [the prosecutor's] conduct, but whether that
conduct, under the circumstances, abrogated the independence of the grand
jury."

In reply, Bevan veritably scoffed at the defense motion, asserting that,
lacking manifest misconduct, grand juries are not subject to review by the
courts. That is, "the grand jury is an institution separate from the
courts, over whose functioning the courts do not preside."

Bevan also stated that rather than testifying, his (lengthy) comments "were
given in direct response to grand juror's questions, and were never
presented as sworn evidence."

As to any misstatement of fact regarding the HRC's shutdown, Bevan wrote,
"The prosecutor's comments were merely an echo of the previous sworn
testimony of Agent Pickette. Regarding providing legal advice, Bevan
maintained his only obligation was to "be accurate and not deliberately
misleading." As to all the back and forth regarding state and federal law,
he claimed, "Indeed, the defendant is not alleging that the grand jury was
improperly instructed as to federal law." Rather, the contention regards
only state law. And he cited one statement that he made and one that
Pickette made regarding the supremacy of federal law. The defense would
point to several other statements on state law.

Finally, even if he did mess up - and he by no means admits that - Bevan
argued that dismissal would be warranted only if, according to case law
(United States v. Sears, Roebuck, and Co., 9th Cir. 1983), "prosecutorial
misconduct has undermined the grand jury's ability to make an informed and
objective evaluation of the evidence presented to it."

Given Judge Breyer's handling of the case so far, hope does not brim to
overflowing that he'll dismiss it on these grounds - not when the
government has already won conviction. It seems clear Ed Rosenthal must
rely on appeal to higher authority.
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