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Latest Headlines and Information

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

VIDEO: Medical Cannabis and the California Crisis (Ahimsa International)


AHIMSA INTERNATIONAL Presents: Medical Cannabis and the California Crisis. A medical marijuana documentary from Northern California.

Ahimsa International: http://ahimsainternational.org/

Proposal for a Medical Cannabis Safety Program: http://ahimsainternational.org/programs/mcsp/about/index.php

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NEWS: Lawmaker's Daughter Battling Melanoma Recurrence with Medical Marijuana

SAN DIEGO -- A local congressman's daughter is battling a recurrence of the deadly skin cancer melanoma.

Briana Bilbray wants to get the word out during Melanoma/Skin Cancer Detection and Prevention month. Bilbray is just 25 years old but has already endured a lifetime of cancer treatments. Her latest surgery was about three weeks ago.

"Anything to where the melanoma could be hiding, they went in there and took it all out," she said.

That comes after the melanoma returned twice since early last year when she noticed a changing freckle on her leg. Intensive, debilitating chemo followed.
"The nausea is just completely unbearable… all you want to do is go take care of it, but you can't," said Bilbray.

After seeing her unable to sleep or eat and losing weight, her friends suggested medical marijuana.

"I kind of brushed it off at first being like that's just how they're trying to legitimize the dispensaries out here," she said.

However, she finally tried it.

"The medicinal marijuana worked instantly," she said. "Not only was the nausea gone, I was hungry."

Thus, an advocate was born. Bilbray wants bans on dispensaries lifted -- as she told the Imperial Beach City Council last July -- saying they were "punishing" the people who need it by keeping the ban in place.

Her father, Rep. Brian Bilbray, a Republican, opposes medical marijuana. In November 2011, Bilbray was quoted as saying, "Dad will come around."

"He was intrigued and wanted to look into it," she said. "He recognizes that there could be some benefit for chemo patients."

While Rep. Bilbray is not fully convinced, his youngest daughter says her experience has made him more open to it.

"It's good when politicians have family to keep them in check," she said with a laugh.

She said her father is about to introduce a bill that would tax tanning beds with the money going toward melanoma research.

Bilbray will begin 12 weeks of immune therapy next month. Her goal is to keep the melanoma from coming back.

Source: 10News.com

NORML - It's Time for a Change

NEWS: NJWeedman goes to trial

Twenty-five months after he was arrested with a pound of high-grade pot in his car, his doctor will testify today that marijuana is the right presecription to alleviate the pain and shrink the bone tumors in NJWeedman’s right leg.

Robert Forchion’s highly publicized trial began May 1 and could lead to sweeping changes in Jersey’s medicinal marijuana laws, or, he could be convicted and face serious prison time stemming from his arrest near Willingboro on April 1, 2010, about four months after Jon Corzine signed the state’s Compassionate Use Act into law as one of his final acts as governor. But the law did not go into effect until July of 2010, and implementation continues to lag during Gov. Chris Christie’s administration, so in the eyes of the state NJWeedman was, and still is, a dope fiend who had a pound of Cali bud in his car.

NJWeedman will appear on Trentonian TV at 7:30 this morning before he drives his Weedmobile back down to Burlington County Superior Court in Mount Holly. Watch the live interview HERE.

“One of the reasons I came to Los Angeles was because when I’m in Los Angeles I’m treated like a medical marijuana patient, not a criminal like I am in New Jersey,” NJWeedman says in one of his many YouTube videos that hit the air in the weeks leading up to his trial in Mount Holly. He held up a medicinal marijuana card issued by Kaisser-Permanente and then held up X-rays of his right leg that he says show the C-cell bone tumors low on his right femur near the knee.

The Burlington County native with dredlocks is acting as his own attorney and argues that he should be found innocent because of jury nullification, meaning he believes Jersey’s marijuana laws are unjust, not his actions. Yesterday he told The Trentonian that Judge Charles Delehey barred him from telling the jury of 7 women and 5 men — 11 whites, one black — that the state’s Compassionate Use Act was signed before his arrest but didn’t go into effect until a few months after. Two of the jurors are nurses.

The judge ruled in January that determining the state’s pot laws is “not the jury’s function.”

But NJWeedman still tells The Trentonian that “the law is wrong, not me.”

For months NJWeedman has said he needs just one juror to understand his pain, his plight, his need to smoke pot as a viable treatment against the bone tumors that Dr. Steven Fenichel is set to talk about today. NJWeedman said he thinks he’s struck a nerve in at least a few “sympathetic” jurors. He said he would appeal a guilty verdict.

“I’ve had this happen to me before when I was in New Jersey, in prison,” NJWeedman said in a video. “It took eight months to get taken care of, under horrible conditions. In California, I not only use medical marijuana, but it’s been shown time and time again to shrink the size of my tumors, reduce the size of their growth, and doctors here have no issues with me using medical marijuana.”

New Jersey’s Compassionate Care Act does not list tumors as one of the reasons to be eligible for medicinal pot. “There is a listing for cancer,” NJWeedman said, “but my condition, luckily for me, has been benign. Each time I’ve been tested (the tumors) have been benign, but they have to be removed, and medical marijuana does work.”

During the trial, NJWeedman said the prosecution has called him “a charlatain” whose use of bone tumor X-rays are part of his “gimmick.”

But the defendant said the part that hurts most is exposing his kids to the cancer Dr. Fenichel will say continues to ravage his right leg.

“At the end of the day I’m Ed Forchion,” he said. “I talk to my kids as Ed Forchion, and I’m in this trial as Ed Forchion. ... It’s tough to bring my kids to court to hear I have cancer. They’ve heard me refer to them as tumors and lumps.”

Source: The Trentonian

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Saturday, May 5, 2012

NEWS: California Appeals Courts Rule on Dispensaries

Recent federal raids have drawn official rebuke from local and state officials across the country. Those raids—including one on Oaksterdam University, a professional training center for medical cannabis providers and patients in California—have brought condemnation from lawmakers in five states and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, as well as San Francisco's mayor and the Democratic Party Committees in San Francisco and Alameda counties.

The state lawmakers representing California, Colorado, Maine, New Mexico and Washington sent a bipartisan letter to the White House urging President Obama to respect state laws.

"States with medical marijuana laws have chosen to embrace an approach that is based on science, reason, and compassion," say the state officials in their letter. "Our state medical marijuana laws differ from one another in their details... Each of our laws, however, is motivated by a desire to protect seriously ill patients from criminal penalties under state law."

The letter states the Department of Justice’s new aggressive policy "makes no sense" and is "not a good use of our resources," echoing what President Obama said as a candidate, Eric Holder has said as Attorney General, and the DOJ 2009 memo on medical cannabis enforcement.

The five-state letter was signed by Assemblymembers Tom Ammiano (D-Calif.) and Chris Norby (R-Calif.), Sen. Jeanne Kohl-Welles (D-Wash.), Rep. Antonio Maestas (D-N.M.), Sen. Cisco McSorley (D-N.M.), Rep. Deborah Sanderson (R-Maine) and Sen. Pat Steadman (D-Colo.).

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) issued a statement May 2 condemning federal interference with the state-sanctioned medical cannabis distribution she says she strongly supports. Speaker Pelosi says she will continue to "advocate federal policies that recognize the scientific evidence and clinical research demonstrating the medical benefits of medicinal marijuana, that respects the wishes of the states in providing relief to ill individuals, and that prevents the federal government from acting to harm the safe access of medicinal marijuana provided under state law."

San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee issued a statement in early April denouncing "recent federal actions targeting duly permitted Medicinal Cannabis Dispensaries...that aim to limit our citizens’ ability to have safe access to the medicine they need." That statement followed a rally of more than 500 patient advocates and a press conference in which several San Francisco supervisors and California state officials denounced the Obama Administration's aggressive tactics.

The Democratic Party Committees of both San Francisco and Alameda counties have also adopted resolutions asking federal agencies to cease interference.

Since the beginning of the year, five San Francisco dispensaries have been forced to shut down due to threats from federal prosecutors, and in early April federal agents raided city-compliant medical cannabis businesses in Oakland, including one of the state's oldest distribution facilities and Oaksterdam University.

Source: Americans for Safe Access

NORML - It's Time for a Change

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

VIDEO: The Obama Administration’s New Drug Control Strategy



Forty years after President Richard Nixon first declared that drug abuse was "public enemy number one," the Obama administration has announced an end to the so-called "war on drugs" approach to drug policy. Recognizing that America will never be able to arrest its way out of the drug problem, the administration's newly announced drug policy strategy shifts away from a law enforcement only approach to a drug policy recognizing that America's drug problem is a public health issue—not just a criminal one. It outlines significant reforms aimed at treating drug addiction as a chronic disease instead of a “moral” failure.

Even though overall drug use is down, and the U.S. prison population declined for the first time in 40 years, more than 7 million people remain under the supervision of the criminal justice system. Of these, more than 2 million are behind bars. Making matters worse, drug-induced deaths now claim more lives than gun violence, and prescription drug abuse has been declared an epidemic. Will these reforms really break the vicious cycle of drug use, crime, incarceration, and rearrest in America?

Source: Center for American Progress

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Tuesday, May 1, 2012

NEWS: Following Culver City Case, Court Of Appeal Clarifies Laws Over Medical Marijuana Dispensaries

Jeffery K. Joseph was convicted of illegally operating Organica on the Culver City/Los Angeles border.

Following the case regarding Jeffrey K. Joseph, the Court of Appeal recently issued an opinion that clarifies the operational parameters of medical marijuana collectives, cooperatives and dispensaries.

The move came following Jeffrey K. Joseph’s conviction, after he established Organica in 2007 - a storefront business that straddled the Culver City/Los Angeles border.

Between 2009 and 2011, undercover law enforcement officers purchased marijuana from Organica in 13 separate transactions and also saw Joseph selling to other customers. He also openly listed the varieties of marijuana for sale and their prices.

After obtaining warrants to search the premises, officers undertook three separate searches. Among them was one by the United States Drug Enforcement Administration, assisted by the Culver City Police Department, which uncovered 48 kilograms of marijuana, hashish, hash oil, numerous beverages and edible products that contained marijuana, and $16,379 in cash.

Customer records recovered by the DEA document 1,772 Organica “patients,” but only 601 of those patients gave addresses that were in the vicinity of Organica, according to a release by KMTG Legal.

Both Los Angeles and Culver City filed an action against Joseph for violations of the Narcotics Abatement Law, the Public Nuisance Law, and the Unfair Competition Law. The trial court found that Joseph and Organica had no defense under either the Compassion Use Act (“CUA”) or the Medical Marijuana Program Act (“MMPA) and the court granted a permanent injunction and entered judgment against Joseph for civil penalties, attorney fees, investigative costs, and court fees.

According to KMTG, the Fourth District Court of Appeal recently determined that in order for a medical marijuana dispensary to be lawful under the MMPA, the operators must cultivate the marijuana on-site.

The court also clarified that any “reasonable compensation” under Health and Safety Code section 11362.765 to be paid for services by a qualified patient or other person authorized to use marijuana “may only be given to a ‘primary caregiver.’” Joseph, however, did not meet the statutory definition of a primary caregiver because there is no evidence the patrons of Organica designated him as their primary caregiver or that he assumed responsibility for the patrons’ “housing, health, or safety.” Also, Organica was not a licensed health care or residential care facility, clinic or hospice.

Source: Culver City Patch

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Medical Cannabis Fragrance Wheel

Learn how the smell of
medical cannabis affects your high.

Sunday, April 29, 2012

NEWS: 11 charged in raid on huge Oakland marijuana grow

Oakland, Calif. (AP) - Alameda County prosecutors have filed charges against 11 people in connection with what police said was one of the largest marijuana grows in Oakland's history.

The Oakland Tribune reports ( http://bit.ly/KlOKTX) that each suspect was charged on Friday with felony possession of marijuana for sale and cultivating marijuana.

The operation's owner, 35-year-old Adrian Orion Papajohn, is also being charged with six counts of being a felon in possession of a firearm and other charges.

Oakland police raided a warehouse on Wednesday night and found about 2,500 pot plants, $40,000 in cash and guns, ammunition and body armor.

The warehouse was also outfitted with a video surveillance system and its doors bolstered with reinforced steel.

Police said the warehouse was not permitted as a medical marijuana operation.

Source: San Francisco Chronicle

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Friday, April 27, 2012

VIDEO: John Grace public comment regarding medical marijuana in Long Beach


John Grace public comment regarding medical marijuana in Long Beach. From Long Beach City Council Meeting April 17, 2012.

The Human Solution - the-human-solution.org

NEWS: San Francisco Democratic Party Calls On Obama To End Medical Marijuana Attacks

San Francisco, CA--(ENEWSPF)--April 27, 2012. The San Francisco Democratic Party adopted a resolution yesterday demanding that President Obama, Attorney General Eric Holder, and U.S. Attorney Melinda Haag "cease all Federal actions in San Francisco immediately, respect State and local laws, and stop the closure of City-permitted medical cannabis facilities." The resolution was co-sponsored by 21 members of the party's Central Committee (DCCC) including: its author Gabriel Haaland, Assembly member Tom Ammiano, State Senator Leland Yee, Supervisor David Campos, Supervisor David Chiu, former State Senator Carole Migden, and former Supervisor Aaron Peskin.

At least 5 permitted San Francisco dispensaries have been forced to close in the last few months as a result of the Obama administration's heightened attack in California. The operators and landlords of these and several more dispensaries were threatened with federal criminal prosecution and asset forfeiture in an effort to shut down access points for the city's tens of thousands of qualified patients. San Francisco has been especially hard hit since October, when California's four U.S. Attorneys escalated an already vigorous federal campaign against medical marijuana.

The DCCC argues that, "the U. S. Attorneys in California are not targeting individuals and organizations that are operating outside of the law, but instead are aggressively persecuting a peaceful and regulated community, wasting Federal resources in using a series of threatening tactics to shut down regulated access to medical cannabis across the state of California." The DCCC also accuses the federal government of "depriving...the State of California [of] much needed tax revenue."

The DCCC resolution comes as President Obama deflects concern and anger over his aggressive enforcement practices in today's issue of Rolling Stone. Backpedaling, President Obama is claiming that "there haven't been any prosecutions" of medical marijuana patients, but he has ignored the broader negative effects of his campaign and the need to treat medical marijuana as a public health issue. "With a highly contentious bid for the White House, Obama should think twice about being out of step with his party and the 80 percent of Americans who support safe and legal access to medical marijuana," said Steph Sherer, Executive Director of Americans for Safe Access, which is part of the SF United campaign.

The passage of yesterday's resolution also comes on the heels of a rally held earlier this month, attended by hundreds of medical marijuana patients and supporters. Since then, the coalition San Francisco United for Safe Access has lobbied legislators to stand up to federal intimidation and coercion. In response to this effort, the DCCC is coming to the aid of city dispensaries by seeking to "establish an emergency plan to expedite the re-permitting of any [shuttered] medical cannabis dispensaries."

The DCCC also endorsed Assembly Bill 2312, a statewide regulatory framework for the medical marijuana industry in California, and called on their fellow Democrats to do the same. Last week, the Assembly Public Safety Committee passed AB 2312, which is now set to be heard by Assembly Appropriations within the next two weeks. "It's irresponsible for the federal government to dismantle established and responsible regulations in California," said the resolution's author and DCCC member Gabriel Haaland. "Hundreds of thousands of patients will be forced into the illicit market, creating unnecessary public safety issues that will affect us all."

Source: http://www.safeaccessnow.org

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Saturday, April 21, 2012

NEWS: Robbers attack man, flee with marijuana worth $500

Whittier, California
WHITTIER, CA - A man who tried to sell marijuana valued at $500 to a medical marijuana dispensary was later assaulted and robbed of his wares by two men Friday night.

Whittier police Lt. Steve Dean said the 10:02 p.m. attack in the 13300 block of Slauson Avenue left the 26-year-old Los Angeles man with a cut above the eye and a broken finger.

Dean said the man earlier went to a Santa Fe Springs dispensary to sell marijuana he grew but was turned down.

Later, he was on Slauson Avenue in Whittier when two men accosted him and demanded the marijuana which was in a backpack.

"It sounds like they fought over the bag," Dean said.

One of the robbers pulled a knife, he added.

"They took the marijuana, cut him over (the eye), broke his finger in several places," Dean said.

The injured man was taken to a local hospital.

Source: San Gabriel Valley Tribune

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Thursday, April 19, 2012

VIDEO: Cheri Sicard's public comments on marijuana raids in Long Beach


Cheri Sicard's public comments on medical marijuana dispensary raids at the Long Beach City Council Meeting on April 17, 2012.

The Cannabis Gourmet Cookbook - http://www.cannabischeri.com/

NEWS: Court of Appeal Upholds Shutdown of Local Marijuana Clinic

Justices Say Facility Operator Implicated in Multiple Incidents of Illegal Activity Not a ‘Primary Caregiver’

The Court of Appeal for this district has upheld an order shutting down a medical marijuana dispensary that straddles the Los Angeles/Culver City boundary.

Div. Two yesterday ordered publication of a March 26 opinion by Justice Victoria Chavez. The panel said Jeffrey K. Joseph, who represented himself, presented no evidence that would have entitled him to a trial in the nuisance abatement action brought by the city attorneys of both cities, so summary judgment and a permanent injunction were properly granted.

Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Michael Johnson, who issued the injunction, that Joseph had no defense under Proposition 215 or the Medical Marijuana Program Act. The injunctions prohibits Joseph and Organica from unlawfully selling, serving, storing, keeping, manufacturing, or giving away controlled substances, including marijuana, anywhere in Culver City or the City of Los Angeles, and from using Organica, Inc.’s business license and tax registration certificate to engage in such activities anywhere in Culver City or the City of Los Angeles.

Johnson also granted judgment for $325,829.75, consisting of $130,000 in civil penalties, $88,165 in attorney fees, $106,549.75 in investigative costs, and $1,115 in court fees.

Multiple Incidents

Chavez, writing for the Court of Appeal, noted that Joseph and the clinic, called Organica, had a history of involvement with illegal drugs. She cited 13 incidents that occurred between 2008 and 2010, including purchases of marijuana by undercover officers; the discovery of marijuana, along with other illegal drugs, in searches by the Drug Enforcement Administration; several police stops of vehicles near the clinic, resulting in seizure of illegal drugs, which the occupants said they obtained at Organica; and a traffic stop in Riverside in which Joseph was found in possession of psilocybin, hashish, and brownies believed to contain marijuana, and a passenger was found in possession of cocaine.

The MMPA, Chavez wrote, protects the cultivation of marijuana for medical purposes. “It does not cover dispensing or selling marijuana,” nor does it permit a clinic to operate for purposes of profit.

‘Primary Caregiver’

A “primary caregiver,” the jurist acknowledged, may collect reasonable expenses incurred in providing marijuana to qualified medical marijuana patients. But Joseph failed to qualify, she said, because he presented no evidence that any patron had designated him their caregiver, that he had assumed responsibility for the wellbeing of any of them, or that Organica had a license to operate as any kind of health or care facility.

The vast majority of patients, the justice further noted, came from outside the area in which it operated.

It was also clear from the evidence, Chavez wrote, that Organica was being used by Joseph to conduct illegal activities.

The jurist explained:
“On multiple occasions, undercover law enforcement officers purchased marijuana at Organica’s premises. Menus listing the varieties and prices of marijuana available for sale were prominently displayed at the premises. An officer observed Joseph assisting an Organica customer with a purchase. In three separate warranted searches of Organica’s premises, law enforcement officers recovered 155.1 kilograms of marijuana, 698 marijuana plants, 488.9 gross grams of marijuana seeds, 43.9 gross grams of marijuana cigarettes, 22.8 kilograms of various edible products containing marijuana, and large amounts of cash.”

Attorneys for the plaintiffs on appeal included Los Angeles Assistant City Attorney Asha Greenberg, Los Angeles Deputy City Attorney Anh Truong, Culver City City Attorney Carol A. Schwab, and Culver City Deputy City Attorney Lisa A. Vidra.
The case is People ex rel. Trutanich v. Joseph, B232248.

Source: Metropolitan News

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Wednesday, April 18, 2012

VIDEO: Marla James' Public Comment on Marijuana Raids in Long Beach (Council Meeting 4-17-12)


Marla James, at the Long Beach City Council Meeting on April 17, 2012, comments on illegal medical marijuana dispensary raids in Long Beach.

The Human Solution - the-human-solution.org

NEWS: California legislative panel passes bill to create oversight for marijuana businesses

SACRAMENTO, Calif. - A California Assembly committee Tuesday passed a bill to create state oversight for pot businesses, as its chairman implored the Legislature to act to stave off federal raids on medical marijuana providers.

"The worst public policy choice for California is to sit idly by, doing nothing, and let this failed war on medical cannabis continue unchecked," said Democrat Tom Ammiano as his Public Safety Committee voted 4-2 along party lines to create a state bureau to police the California medical cannabis industry.

Despite clearing his committee, Ammiano's Assembly Bill 2312 faces long odds of reaching the desk of Gov. Jerry Brown because of strong opposition from police.

John Lovell, a lobbyist for California narcotics officers and police chiefs, blasted the bill as failing to come close to stricter rules passed in Colorado. "This is not regulation," Lovell said. "This is open-ended permissiveness."

AB 2312 would charge fees to dispensaries and other medical cannabis businesses to create a policing agency - the Bureau of Medical Marijuana Enforcement - in the state Department of Consumer Affairs. The board would approve licenses for businesses selling, growing or transporting marijuana for use by people with physicians' recommendations.

The Ammiano bill doesn't include many of the rules in place in Colorado, such as requiring every pot industry worker to be state licensed, mandating video surveillance of marijuana stores and requiring state pre-approval of transportation of medical cannabis.

While some Colorado dispensaries have been targeted for operating near schools, that state hasn't been hit with a broad federal crackdown against cannabis outlets that's unfolding in California.

The Ammiano bill would require cities and counties to allow at least one marijuana dispensary for every 50,000 residents unless local voters approve a ban or tighter restrictions. It would leave it up to a nine-member state board to set rules for the industry.

Don Duncan, California director for Americans for Safe Access, said the bill is a key step for allowing people permitted to use medical marijuana under California's 1996 Compassionate Use Act to obtain it at regulated dispensaries in their communities.

"There is strong support by voters in the state of California to finish this compassionate endeavor," Duncan said. "Confusion has led to bans and moratoriums against dispensaries, and that's bad for patients."

But Cory Salzillo, director of legislation for the California District Attorneys Association, said the bill would require local governments to "comply with activity that is still illegal under federal law."

Source: Bellingham Herald

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NEWS: Greenhouse Cannabis sues Murrieta for $3 million

Greenhouse Cannabis Club Director Eric McNeil filed a $3 million civil lawsuit against Murrieta on Tuesday, alleging the city and its Police Department are violating medical privacy laws and are threatening patients with violence, arrest and detention.

The lawsuit, filed by McNeil's attorney Richard Ackerman in Riverside Superior Court, alleges the city is discriminating against a group of people based on "perceived characteristics about their health or medical condition."

The suit calls into question Murrieta Police Department practices of targeting patients as they left the Jefferson Avenue medical marijuana collective. Those practices were detailed in a federal search warrant served on the club in mid-March.

According to the lawsuit, officers found reasons to pull over patients who left the collective and then questioned their possession of prescribed marijuana. In at least one instance, according to the suit, a police officer followed a patient from the collective into a grocery store and "grilled" her about her medical condition.

"There is no probable cause for invading the sacrosanct privacy rights of the dozens of members of the (collective) who have been pulled over and forced to disclose private medical information for fear of arrest or other mistreatment at the hands of the sworn law enforcement officers of the city," the suit states. "Each and every collective member ... has a right to be free of harassment and unreasonable violations of medical privacy."

Greenhouse Cannabis Club opened in early January and the city quickly asked a judge to order the collective to close. The judge, however, said the city could not deny medical marijuana patients the right to gather. A short time later, the judge approved a city-written injunction that states the collective can serve "no more than two" people. Since that time, the club has remained open and continued to serve patients, just no more than two at a time, McNeil said.

In June, McNeil is scheduled to stand trial on a charge of contempt of court for allegedly violating the order that he not dispense marijuana to more than two people. McNeil's attorney has interpreted that order to mean that no more than two people can be served at a time.

The Drug Enforcement Administration raided the club in mid-March, and earlier this month a judge evicted the club from its premises.

With the lawsuit, McNeil is seeking an injunction against the city and Police Department that would prohibit them from targeting patients. The lawsuit also requests an order striking down the city's existing moratorium on dispensaries and punitive damages in the amount of $3 million.

"The city is trying to prove a point ---- it's become a personal issue for them," McNeil said in a recent interview. "It's personal for me now, too, because every time I'm in here (at the club), patients are so thankful that we're doing what we're doing. The (residents) don't deserve this."

By 5 p.m. Tuesday, the city had not received a copy of the suit, said Deputy City Attorney Bob Mahlowitz.

"It hasn't been served on the city yet," he said. "We haven't seen it, so obviously I can't comment on it."

Source: North County Times

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Sunday, April 1, 2012

Encino Dispensaries, Collectives and Cooperatives

« Back

We encourage you to call the collectives prior to making the trip, in case the hours have changed or the facility has been closed.

Ventura OG Corner
17550 Ventura Blvd. [map]
Encino, CA 91316
Hours: Mon-Sun 10am to 12am
Phone: 818-292-7296
Email: VOGCCaregivers@yahoo.com


Covers the following zip codes in Encino, California: 91316, 91335, 91416, 91426, 91436

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Wednesday, March 28, 2012

NEWS: In Long Beach City, Frustration Leads to Desperation in Solving Medical Marijuana Issue

LONG BEACH, Calif. - On March 21 at 4:41pm, plain clothes officers not providing identification of the Long Beach Police Department, along with Long Beach Department of Finance workers, initiated an illegal raid against NatureCann Non-Profit Patient Group. Acting without a warrant or court order, the officer incursion involved forcefully breaking into the patient collective where three (3) patient volunteers were assisting fellow patients. An observer recording the event outside of the collective was knocked down by an officer who told him the police "can do whatever they want." Scores of businesses along the Atlantic Avenue Corridor were disrupted by the police presence and activity.

Although no warrant was obtained by the department, and no resistance was offered by NatureCann, specialized assault equipment and armed tactics were utilized to force entry into the property. In an attempt to avoid being filmed and prior to making entry, an electronic video surveillance system designed to assist law enforcement was instead destroyed and disabled by the officers. Three (3) volunteers were abducted by the officers on-site while other officers arrested the collective's security guard at a nearby restaurant where he was on break.

When asked about the reason for the incursion and arrest, one of the female NatureCann patient volunteers who declined to be named for fear of reprisal said, "I was in fear for my life, looking at the end of a loaded firearm pointed at my head, by an unidentified intruder twice my size. They broke in and started attacking us. We follow all State laws and provide for seriously ill patients." It was later determined that the volunteers had been arrested under a city ordinance recently rendered invalid by a higher court.

In February, 2012, the Long Beach City Council enacted a ban of all medical cannabis patient dispensaries after its permitting ordinance requiring "substantial" and non-refundable fees was deemed unconstitutional by a California appellate court. Although the ban states it applies to all medical marijuana dispensaries in the city, dispensaries that had paid the substantial fee are not being targeted by authorities. The city announced it would enforce the ban only against patient groups that had not paid the fees. Days after Long Beach passed its ordinance banning all collectives, another California appellate court deemed similar bans illegal.

In June, 2011, a Los Angeles Superior Court judge found that an earlier warrantless raid by Long Beach police officers and officials was improper. Patients involved in that case have filed a suit against the city seeking damages. In addition to being arrested, the volunteer said the police had taken all of the patient group's medication as well as electronic equipment without inventorying or reporting the seizures.

For more information contact Sergio Sandoval,Director of Public Relations, Pappas Law Group,Phone #949-382-1485Email – sergio.sandoval@pappaslawgroup.com

Source: NatureCann

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Sunday, March 25, 2012

NEWS: Medical marijuana delivery man reports he was robbed by ninjas in West Covina

WEST COVINA - Police are looking into a bizarre report of a medical marijuana robbery involving two attackers dressed as ninjas, officials said.

Police received the strange report shortly before 10 p.m. Friday from a medical marijuana delivery man who said he had been robbed in the 800 block of South Sunset Avenue, near Cameron Avenue, after making a delivery to a patient West Covina police Lt. Alan Henley said.

The delivery man, who was in his 40s, told police that, "As he was going back to his vehicle, he was approached by two subjects in ninja costumes who chased him with batons," the lieutenant said.

"The victim said he was scared and he dropped a bag with some marijuana and money. The suspects took it," Henley added.

It was not clear how much cash or pot was taken, police added.

The incident remained under investigation. Police were not aware of any other recent crimes involving suspects dressed as ninjas.

Source: San Gabriel Valley Tribune

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Friday, March 23, 2012

NEWS: LA marijuana dispensary workers join labor union

LA marijuana dispensary workers join labor union

LOS ANGELES -- Marijuana dispensary workers in Los Angeles have joined a labor union to fight for their jobs in an industry that the federal government considers illegal.

Workers at 14 pot shops have formed the "medical cannabis and hemp division" of the United Food and Commercial Workers, Local 770. The 35,000-member union also represents grocery clerks, pharmacists and health care workers.
"This is the next step in professionalizing and stabilizing this new sector of the health care industry," Local 770 President Rick Icaza said at a news conference Thursday. "This is a positive step towards successfully integrating compassionate care into our system of health care."

Los Angeles currently caps the number of medical marijuana dispensaries, but the City Council is considering a full ban in light of a court decision that limits its ability to regulate them.

Icaza said the union would use its considerable political weight to pressure officials to find an alternative to a total ban.

That help will be welcome, said Yamileth Bolanos, president of the Greater Los Angeles Collectives Alliance, which represents dispensaries.

"It's time to bring in some big guns," she told the Los Angeles Times ( http://lat.ms/GQqPfS). "Not only are they threatening access for patients, they're also trying to take jobs away from our employees."

Pot clinics flourished in California after voters in 1996 voted to permit people to cultivate and possess marijuana for what became nearly any medical reason. As hundreds of dispensaries opened, cities and counties struggled to interpret the state law, which was light on specifics.

Some communities sought to outlaw the pot clinics under existing zoning and other ordinances, while others tried to regulate them.

Court rulings have further muddied the waters. Last month, a state appellate court ruled that cities cannot use nuisance ordinances to ban medical marijuana dispensaries.

A Los Angeles-based appellate court last year struck down Long Beach's attempt to license marijuana stores, ruling the local ordinance conflicted with federal law. And another appellate court upheld Riverside's right to close and prohibit dispensaries despite the state's medical marijuana law.

Early on in the Obama administration, the U.S. Justice Department said prosecutors wouldn't focus on pot dispensaries that were following state medical marijuana laws even though the entire industry was considered illegal under federal statutes.

But that attitude has changed, with federal prosecutors arguing that many ostensibly nonprofit clinics are raking in money by supplying marijuana to people without a medical need.

Since last year, federal prosecutors have warned California clinics that they are illegal, filed criminal and civil charges against some owners, and threatened to seize properties that are leased to pot growers. About 140 dispensaries in more than 20 Southern California cities have been told to shut down since October when federal authorities began their statewide effort.

The crackdown hasn't dissuaded some communities from welcoming pot shops. Earlier this month, Oakland officials granted approval for four new medical marijuana dispensaries in the city, bringing the total to eight. Officials said the four dispensaries would generate $1.7 million in annual tax revenue for the city.

Source: The Sacramento Bee

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Wednesday, March 21, 2012

NEWS: Vallejo medical marijuana dispensary certification on hold, city manager says

Vallejo medical marijuana dispensaries anticipating a business license in the mail may have to wait a while.

City Manager Dan Keen said that he has suspended the city's plan to begin issuing business certificates to those dispensaries that have paid a $500 city business fee. The fee was authorized under a ballot measure voters overwhelmingly approved in the November election. The measure's passage has also led to the city approving a 10 percent tax on medical marijuana sales.

City Finance Director Deborah Lauchner said in a recent interview that several dispensaries have paid the fee, although she could not confirm how many. Calls to Lauchner this week were not returned.

Keen's business fee decision follows a maelstrom of questions and confusion about the legality of the city's estimated 20 or more dispensaries. Police began an enforcement effort on Feb. 21, and have raided several dispensaries just before the city began taxing them.

On Tuesday morning, Keen released a five-page memo to the Vallejo City Council. In it, he addressed concerns about the mixed message the city was sending in taxing dispensaries, while at the same time raiding them. Keen's memo acknowledged confusion and suggested that the council may wish to seek legal advice about not enforcing the tax collection "until the situation regarding the regulation of medical marijuana establishments becomes clearer."

The memo, given to council members on Friday, highlights several references in past city staff reports to plans for "vigorous prosecution of illegal medical marijuana operations."
Councilman Robert McConnell, among those who last week called for answers relating to the police crackdown's timing, said Tuesday that he had only glanced at Keen's memo so far.

"I think there's an awful lot more questions ... that need to be addressed," McConnell said. "I think we all have concerns, because it's an evolving saga. I think we have enough problems to worry about on our own in the police department area without getting into MMDs (medical marijuana dispensaries) and whether they comply with federal law.

"The area is about as clear as mud right now."

McConnell said he was unsure if he would continue to call for a public meeting about the issue, because it may require closed-door confidential talks with the city attorney.

Councilwoman Erin Hannigan said she was not surprised by Keen's memo. She added, however, that she understood the public's confusion over the timing of the raids. She also expressed concern over some allegations that police used unnecessary force during the raids against dispensary employees and clients.

Hannigan added that despite any confusion, dispensaries should not consider that a city business license tax makes medical marijuana sales legal in Vallejo.

"It wasn't a mystery to me," Hannigan said of the police raids. "We very clearly had a briefing by staff a couple of months ago as to what our plan was going to be."

Hannigan also shared frustration that the council's direction to its staff to draft regulatory measures to locally legalize dispensary operations had been put on hold because of ongoing legal action elsewhere. She said other cities have continued to move forward in regulating dispensaries while Vallejo has not.

Source: Vallejo Times-Herald

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Tuesday, March 20, 2012

NEWS: Owner reopens G3 Holistic Marijuana Clinic

The medical-marijuana cooperative has survived two Drug Enforcement Administration raids - including one last week - and continues to provide medication to its 2,900 members.

"I've been first in line, and I've been in early every day, so I would continue to be the first in line to solve this issue," said Aaron Sandusky, the president of G3.

Federal law prohibits marijuana, but California voters approved the use of the drug for medical purposes in 1996.

The cooperative has a case pending in the state Supreme Court against the city, which has been fighting to close down G3 Holistic since it opened in 2009.
Councilman Ken Willis, who has been vocal against medical marijuana, said the situation is now between G3 and the federal government.

"But I would caution them," Willis said. "I don't think it's a good idea to flaunt yourself in front of the federal authorities. They have jurisdiction."
The co-op was recuperating from its first raid in November when it was raided again March 12.

Federal agents last week confiscated at least 25 pounds of marijuana and 89 pounds of edible products that contained marijuana.

But, G3 members got together and restocked the co-op so they could reopen.

"We're under duress from the previous raid," Sandusky said. "I'm trying to recover as much as I can. I'm asking everyone to work for medications right now and volunteer as much time as they can. Everybody's obviously very willing to help out."

Brian Muehlen of Ontario, who has been a member of G3 since it opened, was in the cooperative during the first raid.

"It's ridiculous that they're wasting all this federal tax money to come steal everything that's legal in our state," said Muehlen, who has been volunteering at the co-op.

"There's nothing I like more than listening to a patient tell me they've cut five or six pills out of their life that makes them loopy and hurts their liver.
"They cut them out of their life because of this medicine, and we should be able to provide that medicine for those people."

The November raid left G3 Holistic without any medical marijuana, $22,000 in unfunded payroll liability and a $44,000 bill with Southern California Edison. Sandusky's 50 employees lost their health insurance and were forced to apply for unemployment.

G3 Holistic cooperatives in Colton and Moreno Valley, a warehouse in Ontario, Sandusky's home in Rancho Cucamonga and the Rialto home of his partner John Nuckolls were also all raided in November.

As a result of the raid, the co-ops closed.

Sandusky re-opened the Upland location, at 1710 W. Foothill Blvd., on Dec. 30.

Sandusky is suing the landlord of the Ontario warehouse, alleging that the landlord stole some assets not taken during the raid, and is involved in litigation with Colton and Moreno Valley.

The city of Upland was granted an injunction in August 2010 by a West Valley Superior Court judge in Rancho Cucamonga. The city's zoning laws prohibit marijuana dispensaries.

The case has since been heard in the 4th District Appellate Court in Riverside, which ruled in favor of the city, but attorneys for G3 have taken the fight to the state's top court.

Upland has reached out to the federal government regarding their fight against cooperatives in the city. The city has spent more than $400,000 fighting medical marijuana.

However, Willis said he first learned of the raid a couple hours later while at the dentist.

"The feds don't go around telling people they plan to raid some place," he said. "The DEA or the FBI don't have a list of friends that they call before they raid."

Source: Contra Costa Times

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Monday, March 19, 2012

NEWS: Political Activist Filmmaker Kevin Booth Retained by Cannabis Science to Film Specialty Documentary

Doc Herbalist with Kevin Booth (right)
Cannabis Science, Inc. a pioneering U.S. biotech company developing pharmaceutical cannabis (marijuana) products, is thrilled to announce that the company has retained filmmaker Kevin Booth to collaborate on a documentary researching cannabis as a medicine and the truth behind the science of marijuana.

Many people know Kevin Booth’s work with the late comedian, Bill Hicks. Kevin produced most of Bill’s CDs and videos that led to the comedian’s own HBO specials and multiple appearances on David Letterman. The story of Kevin’s seventeen-year friendship and working partnership with Bill Hicks was recently explored in a feature length BBC documentary that just ended a year long run of festivals and theatrical screenings. After Bill’s death from pancreatic cancer in 1994, Kevin’s filmmaking took on a political turn and he produced documentaries with talk show host Alex Jones about the incident in Waco, Texas, the American two-party political system, and 9/11. In 2005, Kevin traveled to the UK in order to promote his book titled “Agent of Evolution” about his friendship with Bill Hicks - published by Harper Collins.

Several of Kevin’s family members died as a result of alcohol, tobacco, and pharmaceutical use. In 2003 Kevin began investigating the drug war in the United States and produced the documentary “American Drug War: The Last White Hope.” In his investigations, he discovered the United States government considers marijuana more dangerous than crack cocaine or crystal meth. Kevin sought to separate fact from fiction by traveling across the United States, documenting the “fallout” from the War on Drugs and seeking possible solutions and alternatives that have worked elsewhere. Kevin has toured the country, showing his film and lecturing at universities in hope of sparking a meaningful debate. “American Drug War” won best feature documentary at several film festivals from coast to coast and aired continuously on the Showtime network between 2008-2010. During this same time the film was also broadcasted on major networks in Canada, Australia, Poland, Lebanon and South Africa. Kevin recently returned from filming in Juarez Mexico for the follow up to “American Drug War" and is aiming for the sequel’s release later this year.

Kevin Booth’s body of work also include “How Weed Won the West" (a light hearted and humorous look into the California Cannabis culture) “Bill Hicks - Sane Man”, multiple music videos, feature length comedy concerts of Bill Hicks, Fear Factor’s Joe Rogan and groundbreaking comic Doug Stanhope. Kevin’s production of the Hick’s CD “Rant in E Minor” was recently awarded the 11th best comedy album of all time by Spin magazine competing against Bill Cosby, Chris Rock, Lenny Bruce, Rodney Dangerfield, Eddie Murphy, Sam Kinison, Woody Allen, George Carlin and Richard Pryor just to mention a few. Kevin’s audio productions “Rant in E Minor”, “Arizona Bay” and “Marble Head Johnson” all contain music written and performed by Kevin Booth and Bill Hick who first started playing music together in a high school punk-rock band named STRESS.

Today Kevin runs Sacred Cow Productions dba SCP Enterprises and self distributes through his own sites including SacredCow.com, AmericanDrugWar.com and Amazon. Several of his titles can be found distributed through Warner Brothers and Gravitas VOD that has now broken Booth’s work into the Latin market on both Netflix and ITUNES.

As previously announced, Cannabis Science has begun pre-production of its documentary, in which prohibition of marijuana, medicinal benefits of the plant, and international medical marijuana programs will be explored. Booth’s interests and demonstrated experience will be a true asset to Cannabis Science’s endeavors. The documentary will expose audience members to the subject of medical marijuana so that they may gain a better understanding of the research, science, and planning that goes into running Cannabis Science, one of the top marijuana research companies. The documentary will teach viewers about the medicinal benefits for a wide variety of conditions and show them that prohibition is unnecessary. This is clearly a topic for which Kevin Booth will provide great assistance, and Cannabis Science is excited to begin this project.

Source: MarketWatch.com

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Friday, March 16, 2012

NEWS: Long Beach Police searching for suspects in shooting of medical marijuana patient

LONG BEACH -- Homicide detectives will be canvassing the Hellman neighborhood on Saturday in the search for three suspects wanted in connection with a brazen midday shooting that left a 32-year-old Long Beach man paralyzed.

The Oct. 4 shooting might have been the result of a botched robbery after the victim left a local medical marijuana dispensary, said Nancy Pratt, a Long Beach Police Department spokeswoman.

Though the victim is not a gang member, the shooter and the other suspects are believed to be in a gang or affiliated with a gang, police said.

The shooting occurred on Rose Avenue, just north of Seventh Street, at about 1:45 p.m. when the gunman got out of a small red car and opened fire on the victim, who was sitting in a blue car, police said.

A passenger in the victim's car was able to avoid being hit by gunfire when he bailed out of the victim's vehicle.

The victim, however, was struck in the upper body. Though he survived the shooting he was left paralyzed, Pratt said.

Long Beach Gang detectives have been investigating the shooting since last October and have exhausted all leads, prompting police to turn to the community for help, Pratt explained.

"They've run with everything they could, but they're kind of at a dead end now," Pratt said.

To help in the investigation, Homicide detectives and Police Explorers will canvass the neighborhood Friday afternoon, searching for possible witnesses and passing out fliers with descriptions of the suspects and their vehicle and a stock photo of a car similar to the car used in the crime.
The shooter is described as a male black, 25 to 29 years old. The driver of the suspects' vehicle was a female black, 19 to 21 years old. A third suspect who got into the suspects' vehicle as the victim walked out of the marijuana dispensary was described as a male black in his 20s, Pratt said.

"The descriptions are a little vague, but we're hoping that someone who was in the area at the time might have information that could aid in the investigation," Pratt said. "They might not know that they saw something significant or this could jog their memory and they might recall seeing the car or the suspects."
Anyone with information is urged to call the Gang Enforcement Detail at 562-570-7370.

Anonymous tips can be sent via text or e-mail at www.tipsoft.com.

Source: Long Beach Press-Telegram

The Human Solution - the-human-solution.org

Thursday, March 15, 2012

NEWS: Medical Marijuana Laboratory BudGenius Announces Free Online Medication Menu for Dispensaries

BudGenius' new "MenuGenius" application educates patients and reduces operational costs for medical marijuana caregivers

Los Angeles, CA (PRWEB)

BudGenius.com, an online medical marijuana laboratory system developed by BG Medical Technologies, Inc. (OTC:RIGH), announces "MenuGenius", a new online tool available to all cannabis caregivers. This application is offered to all cannabis professionals that signup for a free account on the BudGenius.com system. The online medicine menu displays statistics for both tested and untested variants of marijuana medicine, and is deployable to nearly any website at no additional charge. Medical marijuana directory websites can also take advantage of the tool, as it has been developed to integrate as an add-on module into several popular content management systems, offering native search capabilities for listed strains. Directory websites can also increase their revenue through an affiliate business model for medical cannabis testing, which comes integrated with the MenuGenius software.

BudGenius expects MenuGenius to largely replace its previously developed "badges" program, a system of deployable strain graphics for tested cannabis strains responsible for 20% of overall BudGenius.com site traffic. By introducing MenuGenius to all dispensaries nationwide this is expected to increase overall web traffic by 250% within six months, furthering brand awareness, and forming new relationships for future product releases. Ongoing increases in web traffic are planned to set a substantial foundation for BudGenius' advertising network, slated for release later this year.

Dispensaries will find the tool an appealing module to attract new patients, service current patients, and lower website development costs. Delivery services will also find the tool useful by connecting patients with their immediately available inventory. Caregivers are encouraged to deploy the menu nearly anywhere online including websites, forums, directories, and even email newsletters, all of which can be updated simultaneously in real-time.

"We are thrilled to be introducing the first easy-to-read online menu that displays important statistics while also showcasing the beauty of each cannabis strain," explains CEO, Angel Stanz. "We expect MenuGenius will encourage additional testing by medically conscious caregivers, while also supporting the cannabis industry through open information sharing."

A demonstration of MenuGenius is available at:
www.BudGenius.com/menu-genius.html

BudGenius launched an exclusive version of the menu earlier this year with strategic partner GreenbookPages.com , and celebrated with a widely distributed Los Angeles area billboard campaign. Caregivers immediately seeking a directory service that has integrated MenuGenius are invited to contact Greenbook Pages for their services.

MenuGenius will be made available on April 2nd for cannabis caregivers nationwide. Caregivers interested in participating immediately are encouraged to signup at www.BudGenius.com/signup.html for a beta trial account.

Source: SF Gate

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NEWS: Couple cited for smoking medical pot in plaza

A San Francisco couple was cited last weekend for smoking medical marijuana in the Castro neighborhood's Jane Warner Plaza.

The citations point to something many may not have realized about rules governing the plaza that were approved by the Board of Supervisors and signed by Mayor Ed Lee earlier this year: Smoking marijuana (or tobacco) in the public space is prohibited.

The rules, introduced by gay District 8 Supervisor Scott Wiener, who represents the Castro and other neighborhoods, also cover Harvey Milk Plaza. Both plazas are at the intersection of Market and Castro streets.

Robert Blitzer, 66, said that he and his husband, Xenry, 63, were in the parklet sharing a joint Sunday afternoon, March 11. Xenry goes only by one name.

Blitzer said they have a home nearby on States Street and consider the plaza "our living room in the Castro." He said they had been smoking medical marijuana in the plaza since it began as a temporary installment in 2009.

He said that Sunday, San Francisco Police Officer Matt Loya asked them if what they were smoking was tobacco, and Blitzer responded that it was marijuana. He said that Loya checked their medical marijuana ID cards and their drivers' licenses and spent half an hour with them.

"People around us were horrified," Blitzer said. "... They couldn't believe a senior citizen couple was being harassed for smoking medical marijuana."

Blitzer and Xenry have been together for 42 years. They were married in Marin County in 2008, before California voters passed the Proposition 8 same-sex marriage ban. The state recognizes their marriage as legal.

Blitzer said that he uses marijuana because he has severe glaucoma and is losing his sight. Xenry has had an abdominal bypass and is frequently in pain.

The citation that each man received refers to state health and safety code that says, "except as authorized by law, every person who possesses not more than 28.5 grams of marijuana, other than concentrated cannabis, is guilty of an infraction punishable by a fine of not more than ... $100."

Their citations instruct them to appear in front of a judge by April 11.

Asked about the couple's situation, Wiener said that the intent of his legislation "was to prohibit smoking in the plaza. We didn't distinguish between tobacco and cannabis."

Referring to older rules for "public spaces such as parks and certain sidewalk areas," he said, "We never distinguished between tobacco and cannabis, so this legislation is consistent with the previous ways we've addressed bans on public smoking."

However, Wiener said, "The police in San Francisco should follow our city's policy of making marijuana enforcement the lowest priority."

He added, "I don't think we should be prosecuting people for personal consumption of marijuana ... absent extraordinary circumstances."

Blitzer said there was another officer with Loya, but he didn't know that officer's name. Loya didn't respond to an interview request. San Francisco Police Department spokespeople didn't reply to emailed questions about the incident.

Responding to emailed questions about how the district attorney's office would handle the citations, DA spokeswoman Stephanie Ong Stillman said that "generally speaking," people receiving infractions similar to Blitzer and Xenry's should be able to take their case to a neighborhood court. Blitzer and Xenry's citation would be in the jurisdiction of the Mission Station court.

"A neighborhood prosecutor will review their citation and determine if they are a good candidate for neighborhood court," Ong Stillman said.

Through that program, local residents are trained in restorative justice to adjudicate matters, instead of having cases charged and heard in criminal courts.

Ong Stillman noted that, "a medical marijuana card allows an individual to possess, but not smoke, in public."

Source: The Bay Area Reporter

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Tuesday, March 13, 2012

NEWS: Cannabis Science, Inc. Begins Pre-Production of Groundbreaking Cannabis Television Documentary

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo., (BUSINESS WIRE) -- Cannabis Science, Inc., a pioneering U.S. biotech company developing pharmaceutical cannabis (marijuana) products, is excited to be embarking on a medical marijuana documentary project. Pre-production of this groundbreaking educational film is currently underway.

Many documentaries about marijuana have been made, typically focusing on getting high or the medicinal effects and benefits. Cannabis Science will be first documentary to focus on the science behind medicinal cannabis, including untangling the history of marijuana's reputation, the improvement it can bring to people's daily lives, and what breakthroughs could be on the horizon for this emerging industry.

Modern science supports a long list of illnesses that cannabis can treat: Multiple Sclerosis, Cancer, Arthritis, HIV/Aids, Asthma, Alzheimer's Disease, Anti-aging, Auto Immune Disease, brain trauma (closed head injury), Crohn's Disease, chronic pain management, Diabetes, digestive illnesses, Gastro Intestinal Reflux Disease (GERD), high blood pressure, Glaucoma, Influenza, Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus (MRSA), Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), Tourette Syndrome, and Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS), etc. The science gives a foundation for understanding the broad spectrum of benefits that can be achieved by increasing the cannabinoid activity in people suffering from so many illnesses.

Part of the science that will be explored are the various forms marijuana can take as a medication, including edibles, pills, liquids, and strips that dissolve on the tongue. The documentary will investigate how these forms are processed in the body and can reverse or minimized the effects of disease. Cannabis Science is first and foremost a "patient orientated company." Therefore, patients will be interviewed, giving the audience a glimpse at the real, positive benefits the medicine provides for those with chronic illness, as opposed to the prevailing and false belief that marijuana is addictive and even harmful.

Other documentaries showcase marijuana culture, likening it to the popular view of the 1960s and marijuana use running rampant among the hippie population. Cannabis Science's documentary, however, will show cannabis in a positive light and demonstrate that what has been, and is, taught by prohibitionists is false, and ignores modern science, history, and the voice of patients. The documentary will also focus on the co-founders of Cannabis Science, how the company is working to target critical illnesses, conducting much needed research, and is developing cannabis-based medications. The audience will hear the views of doctors who have discovered for themselves through treating patients the amazing benefits that cannabis based medicines can provide for their patients.

While the main focus of the documentary is not political, learning the truth about the science of cannabinoids will educate the public on the damage caused by prohibition. Patients whose circumstances could have drastically improved and who could have reduced the severity of their illnesses much earlier from medical marijuana will be interviewed. The film will explore the reasons behind the delay in world governments opening up to the idea that medical marijuana is a beneficial reality.

Source: Market Watch

Thursday, March 8, 2012

VIDEO: Mike Oliveri Gets the Final Word at a LA City Council Meeting

Due to transportation difficulties, Mike Oliveri (patient activist) arrives at the Los Angeles Council Meeting right at the tail end of Public Comment. Nevertheless he still manages to get in and on record, the case for medical marijuana collectives.



The Human Solution - the-human-solution.org

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

NEWS: Ocean Beach Woman Re-United With Her Son After Going Through Government Wringer

Last year, when a fire consumed the Ocean Beach apartment building where Larissa Danielli and her son, Silas resided, another fire of injustice and persecution started up that very day.

There were terrible consequences suffered by single mom Larissa and her sweet little boy who were doubly victimized by the tragedy that ensued.

I consider myself fortunate to be a friend of brave mom Larissa and I want to make sure her story gets heard and that she also has a chance to clear her name. It was sullied by smears, insults, and bare-faced lies that seem to have surrounded her as she has battled back to reunite herself with Silas and fight the bogus charges heaped on her by CPS, the San Diego Police Dept., and to a certain extent, our local San Diego media.

Pictures of Larissa being arrested the day the fire struck her residence were splashed all over the newspapers and local TV stations. I can say with absolute certainty that Larissa is an excellent person, wonderful mom, loyal friend and a pleasure to know. She and Silas did not deserve the treatment they were accorded.

I spoke with Larissa recently and I am happy to report she is now back with Silas. But it has not been an easy path and it was strewn with landmines all the way along. This is what she told me:

I’d like to expose how the government is wasting money; how my court appointed juvenile attorney ‘volunteered’ me for rehab; 5 days/week, 3-5 hours/day. After 1 month, the rehab said they would then ‘assess’ me (no assessment given before or even a drug test). This is the standard and all paid for by the taxpayers.

For 3 months, I was only LEGALLY allowed to see my son for 3 hours per day, and that continued up until the very day I was told the case against me was being completely dismissed. My own caseworker sat there and told me she thought I was a great mother and my home was safe.

It took them 3 months to give me one drug test (even though the whole time I was telling them to drug test me) and then everything was completely thrown out because it was negative. The dismissal paper states exactly that.

I was put thru the wringer, threatened, scared, bullied and abused all for nothing. They put a restraining order on me for a whole week where I wasn’t even allowed to SPEAK to my baby. I did 5 days in jail for Felony Child Endangerment with Intent to Kill for being a legitimate, card-carrying medical marijuana patient.

As you can see, Larissa has suffered greatly and her family was shattered by the lies and the bogus claims that she was put through. The system let this lady down big time and caused undue grief and suffering that still continues to this day.

Larissa confided in me that she is still trying to recover.

“Physically, mentally, emotionally and financially,” she told me that “some days are better than others.” However the trauma and stress make her feel unsafe.

“I feel at any time, I will be attacked in my home again. My son used to have no fear and was so secure and active. Now he’s quiet and just wants to stay home. He gets very upset when I have to leave and he clings to me when he sleeps.”

Larissa is having financial issues from all the expenses she has incurred fighting to clear her name and reclaim her son.

“I was getting by and even had a couple months paid ahead on rent and on my car. Due to this incident, I’m so far behind now, I can barely make rent and my car is 2 months behind and being threatened to be repossessed.”

Larissa is a fighter and said she has “no option but to keep fighting and try to pull myself out of the hole I am in.” Let’s all say a prayer on behalf of our Ocean Beach sister and know that things are tending to looking up for Ms. Danielli and Silas. But also know that there but for the Grace of God go you. Fight the scourge of corrupt government swooping in and trying to ruin a good person for no good reason. God Bless Larissa and Silas Danielli.

Source: OB Rag

Monday, March 5, 2012

NEWS: Two more arrested in former Chico man's killing in Long Beach

LONG BEACH — Two more suspects have been arrested in the killing of a former Chico man in 2011 in what's believed to be a medical marijuana robbery.

Phillip Victor Williamson, 29, of Los Angeles, died March 25 of that year, after being found in an alley the previous night, suffering from a gunshot wound.

Investigators discovered Williamson was involved in the distribution of marijuana from Chico to medical marijuana collectives in Los Angeles.

Williamson was thought to be carrying about $500,000 in cash and seven pounds of processed marijuana when he was killed. None of the money or pot was recovered.

Marcel Maurice Mackabee, 29, was taken into custody by Long Beach police in Chico last July 31 followed a lengthy investigation.

Mackabee's wife, Rosemary Sayegh, 32, was charged as an accessory on July 29 in the slaying of Williamson, but the case against her was later dismissed without prejudice.

Prosecutors said it could be refiled at a later date.

On Thursday detectives on the Long Beach Police Department's Career Criminal Apprehension Team arrested two more suspects. Kenneth Ray Johnson, 36, and Charles Anthony Mackbee, 42, both of Long Beach, were arrested at approximately 10 a.m. at their homes without incident. Charles

Anthony Mackabee and Marcel Mackabee are cousins.

Today the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office charged both new suspects with one count of murder.

Anyone who may have information on this case is asked to contact homicide detectives Scott Lasch and Donald Goodman at 1-562-570-7244. Anonymous tips may also be submitted via text or web by visiting www.tipsoft.com.

Source: Chico Enterprise-Record

Cookin' WIth Cake: Medicated Gummies Demo Video.

I’ve been asked to please demonstrate on video how to make some of my tasty recipes. So, since I’ve got no video or editing skillz, bear with me while I pick some up. Meantime, here’s a demo of the gummies to show how super simple they are to whip up! ~YellowJuanaCake



See also Cake’s Gummy Blog with pictures.

Cookin' with Cake - YellowJuanaCake.com

NEWS: FRENCH VALLEY - Commercial park was hub for marijuana

According to growers, 18 separate pot growing operations were crammed into 3 small, nondescript buildings. Arrests were made though no charges have been filed

Over the past year, an out-of-the-way commercial park on the outskirts of Murrieta became a hub of do-it-yourself medical marijuana growers.

According to the growers, 18 separate operations were crammed into suites in three small, nondescript buildings in French Valley. They grew plants under bright lights and sold the marijuana elsewhere to small numbers of patients. They worked quietly for at least a year, until federal drug agents and sheriff’s deputies shutting down a well-known dispensary stumbled onto their secret gardens.

Three growers were arrested but no charges have been filed. Riverside County district attorney’s spokesman John Hall said his office is not reviewing the case for possible charges. The U.S. attorney’s office said no federal arrests are expected.

The growers said they thought their operations were legal. California law allows members of collectives to buy and sell medical marijuana from each other as long as they are not-for-profit. The growers said they ran such nonprofit collectives.

The incident shows how difficult it still can be to navigate the conflicting state and federal laws governing medical marijuana more than 15 years after California voters made it legal. Marijuana is still considered an illegal narcotic under federal law.

Craig Cawley, 53, of Winchester, was among three people arrested during the raids. He has not been charged with a crime.

Cawley said he talked to officials from the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department and district attorney’s office, whose names he did not know, who told him his setup was OK. He kept his harvest small — many growers believe they won’t be busted for fewer than 100 plants — and felt everything was legal.

“I believed that to the moment I was handcuffed,” Cawley said.

FOR RENT

The tenants said the property was empty until their Orange County-based landlord hit on a new strategy: market it to marijuana growers.

An ad for the property on Craigslist didn’t mention marijuana but encouraged prospective tenants to “GROW GROW GROW”, according to marijuana growers who responded to it.

The ad no longer appears on the website.

Jonathan Cringan, 26, who also was arrested, said the landlord, David Cox, faced two options.

“Either lose the property or … rent it to weed growers,” Cringan said. “‘Cause that’s the only business in California where anybody’s making any money.”

Cox, reached by phone, declined to comment. It is unknown if he will face criminal charges.

For at least a year, the growers said, tenants paid twice the going rate, in cash, for the opportunity to harvest marijuana in the secluded park.

Cawley said he paid $3,000 a month for two adjoining suites. Offices in neighboring buildings rented for about $.60 per square foot, while space in Cox’s buildings cost $1.20, Cawley said.

The deal was worth it because landlords willing to accept small-scale marijuana farms in their buildings were rare, the growers said. And after the U.S. Attorney’s Office last year announced it was going after building owners who rented to dispensaries, even fewer were willing to allow any kind of marijuana activity, they said.

Cox had no shortage of prospective tenants, Cawley said.

“There was a line of people right behind me.”

WELL-KNOWN GROWERS

The property is on Innovation Court, just north of Murrieta off Winchester Road, among a sea of similar-looking rectangular structures. In nearby buildings, tenants include construction and air conditioning contractors, party rental and cleaning businesses.

Craig King, owner of Kitchen Places, said it was well known the buildings next door housed a collection of small marijuana farms.

“When the wind was blowing in the right direction, you could smell it,” he said.

The marijuana operations were housed in three adjacent buildings but run independently, Cringan said. He said the growers mainly kept to themselves, and while he felt he was operating legally, he worried the other operators would one day bring legal problems to his doorstep.

“Nobody’s involved in this industry without knowing that possibility exists,” he said.

DISPENSARIES TARGETED

In October, the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Sacramento announced a statewide crackdown on medical marijuana dispensaries. Storefronts that sold marijuana had to shut down, the office said, or their operators and their landlords would face penalties.

Most of the operations at the French Valley commercial park were run by small-scale growers who kept a few dozen plants and sold the marijuana off-site to members of small collectives. But the property did house two storefront dispensaries, which sold to thousands of patients on-site.

One of the dispensaries closed soon after the warning, the growers said. The other, Disabled American Veterans Collective, did not.

So in January, Drug Enforcement Authority agents and Riverside County sheriff’s deputies served a search warrant and shut down Disabled American Veterans Collective, which has no relation to the nonprofit veterans services organization.

The dispensary’s owners, Kevin O. Freeman, 38, and Shelly Lee Walker, 28, of Murrieta, were arrested. They have not been charged with any crimes.

While searching the dispensary, officers heard the telltale sounds of large industrial fans and drug-sniffing dogs detected marijuana in adjoining suites, according to a federal search warrant. The discoveries led them to the enclave of growers.

Cringan and Cawley said they would have left the park if authorities had warned them, as they had the dispensary owners.

“I’m not trying to stick a middle finger up to the Justice Department,” Cringan said. “I’ve got respect.”

Cringan, Cawley and Scott Aaron Fielder were arrested on suspicion of cultivation and possession, sale and transportation of marijuana. They were each held for 72 hours and then released without charges being filed.

DEA agents took part in the raids but Department of Justice spokesman Thom Mrozek said no federal arrests were coming.

While some growers talk about improving access to sick people and standing up for patients’ rights, Cringan just wanted a job, he said. At the end of the day, that’s why people shell out thousands for rent and utility bills and risk prison, he said.

“The reality is, nobody would do this if we weren’t making money,” Cringan said. “Nobody’s going to risk going to federal prison unless there was some money in it.”

After graduating from Chaparral High School in Temecula and San Diego State University, Cringan said he was kicked out of George Washington University Law School in Washington, D.C., after an argument with a professor over a failing grade on a paper about medical marijuana laws.

Cawley said he was trying to raise money to start a charity that would send kids to summer camp.

Both men spent three days in jail, spent thousands of dollars on rent, electricity and the supplies that went into confiscated plants, and could wait up to three years before learning if they will be charged with any crimes.

“I’m at a crossroads in my life,” said Cringan, who is now living at home with his father in Menifee. “There aren’t many good choices available.”

Source: The Press-Enterprise