Coalition for Medical Cannabis

Feds Raid Three Medical Marijuana Facilities In California

Federal agents and other law enforcement officers raided medical marijuana facilities in California and made some arrests in on June 22, 2005. The New York Times reported on June 23, 2005 ( "Arrests Follow Searches In Medical Marijuana Raids") that "Federal agents executed search warrants at three medical marijuana dispensaries on Wednesday as part of a broad investigation into marijuana trafficking in San Francisco, setting off fears among medical marijuana advocates that a federal crackdown on the drug's use by sick people was beginning. About 20 residences, businesses and growing sites were also searched, leading to multiple arrests, a law enforcement official said. Agents outside a club in the Ingleside neighborhood spent much of the afternoon dragging scores of leafy marijuana plants into an alley and stuffing them into plastic bags."

At the same time, federal charges were also filed against a doctor and her husband in Sacramento in an unrelated case. According to the Times, "In a separate investigation, a federal grand jury in Sacramento indicted a doctor and her husband on charges of distributing marijuana at the doctor's office in Cool, a small town in El Dorado County. The doctor, Marion P. Fry, and her husband, Dale C. Schafer, were arrested at their home in nearby Greenwood and pleaded not guilty in federal court in Sacramento to charges of distributing and manufacturing at least 100 marijuana plants. The authorities said in a court document that Dr. Fry wrote a recommendation for medical marijuana to an undercover agent from the Drug Enforcement Administration even though there was a 'lack of a medical record,' and that her husband provided the agent with marijuana. The raids and arrests were the first large-scale actions against marijuana clubs and providers since the Supreme Court upheld federal authority over marijuana on June 6, even in states like California, where its use for medicinal purposes has been legal since 1996. The raids involved agents from federal agencies including the Drug Enforcement Administration, the Internal Revenue Service and the Secret Service."

Activists and supporters denounced the federal actions. The Times noted that "The raids angered and alarmed advocates of medical marijuana, some of whom stood on the sidewalk outside the clubs in San Francisco as federal agents worked inside. 'This is an affront to patients and should not be happening,' Kris Hermes, legal director of Americans for Safe Access, a marijuana advocacy group, said outside a storefront club that nearby residents said was used to grow marijuana not distribute it. Mr. Hermes said he could not say if the raids were a result of the Supreme Court ruling, but called it 'unacceptable' that federal agents were accompanied by the San Francisco police because the city several years ago declared itself 'a safe haven' for medical marijuana users. Several blocks away, agents seized computer records, medical files and marijuana plants at the Herbal Relief Center on Ocean Avenue. A security gate across the entrance had been pulled open, and a lock lay cut open on the sidewalk. 'They came here before we even opened,' said Van Nguyen, 27, who said the dispensary had been in operation about five years and had the records of several thousand patients."

copyright © 2005, Coalition for Medical Marijuana
Sponsors Include: American Alliance for Medical Cannabis   --   Americans for Safe Access   --   Angel Justice   --   Angel Wings Patient OutReach, Inc.   --   California NORML   --   CannabisMD   --   Cannabis Action Network   --   Cannabis Consumers Campaign   --   Change The Climate   --   Common Sense for Drug Policy   --   DRCNet   --   Drug Policy Alliance   --   DrugSense   --   Green Aid   --   Human Rights in the Drug War   --   Patients Out of Time   --   Safe Access
Updated: Thursday, 16-Jul-2009 10:04:22 PDT   ~   Accessed: 9453 times
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