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The Problem With California Contraband

June 3, 2001

Jay R. Cavanaugh, Ph.D.

AAMC National Director

Many local California police and sheriff officials have developed an intriguing new method of “complying” with the California Compassionate Use Act while “honoring” the Federal Controlled Substances Act.

The schizophrenic yet brilliant method these recalcitrant officials have come up with is simple. Whenever they come across legitimate patients or caregivers who are in possession of, transporting, furnishing, or cultivating medical marijuana, they seize the marijuana, detain the patients or caregivers, but do not complete an arrest. Not arresting Californians qualified under the Compassionate Use Act is the way these officials  “comply” while their seizure of medicine is their way to “honor” the Controlled Substances Act. To not seize or to seize and return medicine, these officials say, would be “aiding and abetting” a Federal felony for which they could lose grant funds. Letting patients and caregivers go (without medicine) is their way of avoiding charges of false arrest and losing cases in jury trials.

I am certain that many police and sheriff officials are quietly congratulating themselves on the “perfect” solution to tearing the guts out of the California Constitution and Proposition 215 which they personally hate. They believe they are above reproach or recrimination in these new and heartless tactics. Of course, the California Constitution demands that these officials uphold the law unless a Federal Court of Appeal has deemed a State Law unconstitutional. Not even the United States Supreme Court in the 8-0 decision rejecting medical necessity as a defense for “Cannabis Clubs” came close to obviating California law.

Backed by huge grants from the Federal Office of Criminal Justice Planning, the DEA, and other Federal departments, it is not a surprise to anyone that some local officials would choose to be prostitutes for Washington. Prostituting and pimping for the Feds may be sleazy but that is the least of the charges that local officials may soon face. Many citizens have asked the simple question, “What happens to all of that marijuana that they seize”?

The fact is that since no criminal charges are filed, the medicine seized is not evidence. If the U.S. Attorney’s Office is disinterested in every minor seizure of medical marijuana and the cases are not routinely referred for Federal prosecution, then just what is the status of the “contraband”? Since State cases cannot be made without violating the Compassionate Use Act, the medicine seized is not contraband in California. If the medicine is Federal contraband, is it being routinely shipped to the Feds? Is there a chain of custody? Are detailed receipts provided the “non suspects”?

Unless all local police and sheriffs have been formally deputized as United States Marshall’s, what are they doing possessing medical marijuana for which they have no valid legitimate medical exemption? The Compassionate Use Act does not exempt California sworn officers in the course of their duties to possess marijuana. I should think Californians would be vitally interested to learn that their local police and sheriffs are not their own but actually Federal Drug Police.

If they were not Federal police then they would be equally interested to know why local law officers who seize, destroy, or possess marijuana taken from patients and caregivers aren’t subject to arrest.

Can a legitimate California medical marijuana patient or caregiver conduct a citizen’s arrest upon those police and sheriffs who take their medicine? I would hope they wouldn’t try it or I’m certain the local police would find (or make up) charges. They would, in all likelihood, resist such citizen arrests with force.

Our District Attorney’s and most certainly our State Attorney General can investigate and arrest local law officers for possession of contraband and destruction of citizen property. You see the price of pimping and prostitution is going up. It’s time for legal minds better than mine to address these critical questions. Just who is going to do something about local authorities taking away the legitimate medicine of those who suffer?

     
   

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