For Immediate Release: October 13th, 2010
Medical Marijuana Patient Advocates Hold San Jose Protest in Response to Local Arrests
Aggressive enforcement resulted in nearly two-dozen arrests with no evidence of state law violations
San Jose, CA -- Medical marijuana patient advocates
and other stakeholders are staging a protest this Thursday as criminal
court proceedings begin at the Terraine Courthouse. The
protests are in response to aggressive law enforcement actions over the
past two weeks by several local police departments and the State Bureau
of Narcotic Enforcement. The so-called investigation, which resulted in
the arrest of nearly two-dozen medical marijuana patients and providers
in Santa Clara County on October 1st and 7th, is cynically referred to
by law enforcement as Operation "Up in Smoke." A press
conference will take place at 12:30pm with
some of the arrested patients, their attorneys, as well as patient
advocates highlighting staunch opposition to aggressive law enforcement
tactics.
What: Protest & press conference with arrested
medical marijuana patients, their attorneys, as well as patient
advocates
When: Thursday, October 14, 2010 at 12:30pm
Where: In front of the Terraine Courthouse at 115
Terraine Street, San Jose
"We demand that the Santa Clara County District Attorney immediately
drop the charges," said Lauren Vazquez,
Director of the Silicon Valley chapter of Americans for Safe Access
(ASA),
the country's leading medical marijuana advocacy organization. "In a
democratic society, we develop laws that protect our sickest people,
not that leave them susceptible to police harassment and criminal
prosecution." Police officers posed as sick patients, claiming
immobility and homelessness, in order to entrap medical marijuana
delivery services, many of which were family-run businesses. The
arrestees included senior patients and many who were born and raised in
Santa Clara County.
The October 1st multi-agency law enforcement actions focused on medical
marijuana delivery services in the greater San Jose area, which
resulted in 22 arrests. Whereas,
on October 7th, police raided a local dispensary, New Age Healing
Collective, and made at least one additional arrest. According to local
news sources,
police seized about 25 pounds of medical marijuana and more than 200
plants on October 1st, and about 40 pounds from the October 7th
dispensary raid. Charges against patients included possession,
possession with intent to sell, and conspiracy to distribute. Many of
the arrestees were forced to sign statements that they were selling
drugs for profit.
Santa Clara Police Chief Stephen Lodge claimed that, "Those arrested
have perverted the important role of a caregiver for seriously ill
patients for their own financial gain," but has provided no evidence of
wrongdoing. In fact, those arrested claim to be operating under
Health and Safety Code Section 11362.775, which defines collective and
cooperative association, not "caregiving," defined under a
different statute of the Medical Marijuana Program Act, passed by the
California legislature in 2003. "Police ought to fully understand the
law before conducting aggressive and harmful actions against
law-abiding medical marijuana patients," continued Vazquez.
The enforcement actions come as the San Jose City Council
is in the throes of developing a local ordinance that would regulate
and license the dozens of dispensaries which currently operate in the
area.
The San Jose City Council also recently voted to place Measure U on the
November ballot, which would tax medical marijuana patients 10 percent,
in addition to the existing state sales tax patients already pay. "How
can the City of San Jose charge patients an exorbitant tax and at the
same time arrest and prosecute them?" asked Vazquez. Americans for Safe
Access strongly opposes San Jose's tax measure, as well as other local
measures across California that impose an unreasonable taxes on
patients, whose medicine is already prohibitively expensive.
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