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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Pot Ads Blaze Trails
Title:US CA: Pot Ads Blaze Trails
Published On:2003-01-23
Source:Long Beach Press-Telegram (CA)
Fetched On:2008-01-21 13:56:41
POT ADS BLAZE TRAILS

Calif.: Signs Endorsing Medical Marijuana Feature Grower's Preteen Daughter.

SAN FRANCISCO Along with roadside advertisements for beer, liquor and
fast-food, California motorists will now see billboards promoting medical
marijuana.

The 30 billboards, which began appearing Wednesday in San Francisco and
across the state, feature an 8-year-old Chico girl whose father, Bryan
Epis, is serving 10 years on federal marijuana cultivation charges.

"Medical Marijuana, Compassion, not Federal Prison,' read the billboards,
which are sponsored by a host of marijuana groups.

They also show young Ashley Epis holding a sign that reads: "My Dad is not
a criminal.'

Her photo was taken at a rally outside the federal courthouse in Sacramento
last year, where her father was sentenced for growing cannabis for a Chico
medical marijuana club.

California voters approved Proposition 215 in 1996, allowing people to use
marijuana with a doctor's recommendation. The federal government, however,
does not recognize the medical marijuana law and has been raiding
California medical pot clubs and arresting growers who say they were
cultivating for patients.

A spokesman for the Drug Enforcement Administration, Richard Meyer, said
the marijuana groups are "certainly entitled to express their opinions.'

But he added that "marijuana has no accepted medical use' and "our job is
to enforce federal laws.'

Third-grader Ashley Epis said she agreed to be on the billboard.

"I want everybody to know that my dad is not a criminal,' she said.

Mike Gray, chairman of Common Sense for Drug Policy, said the campaign was
designed to "wake up the federal government.'

Billboard company Clear Channel Outdoor donated the space for a month. The
marijuana groups said they paid about $20,000 for the banners.

"As a company, any unsold corporate space is donated back to the
community,' said Ben Scott, the company's governmental affairs manager.
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