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THE 'GURU OF GANJA' WALKS FREE
by Ann Harrison
June 4 -- Set free by a San Francisco federal judge who
sentenced him to just one day in prison, medical cannabis
grower Ed Rosenthal said today that his case will be the
catalyst to overturn all U.S. marijuana laws under which
750,000 Americans are arrested each year.
"These laws are doomed," said Rosenthal to
group of cheering supporters outside the courthouse after
his sentencing. "I am going to make it safe for everyone
to grow by bringing these laws down."
Rosenthal was convicted in January of three marijuana
cultivation and conspiracy charges. He faced more than
80 years in federal prison and $2.5 million in fines.
The Federal Probation Department had recommended that
Rosenthal be sentenced to two 21-month sentences to be
served concurrently.
Since Rosenthal was prosecuted under federal law, U.S.
District Judge Charles Breyer prevented him from using
California's Prop. 215 as a defense in his case. Prop.
215, which is not recognized by the federal government,
allows critically ill patients to grow, posses and consume
cannabis with a doctor's recommendation.
When the jurors who convicted Rosenthal later discovered
that he had been growing starter plants for patients,
they renounced their guilty verdict and announced that
they had been misled. Eight of the jurors in the case
wrote a letter to Judge Breyer asking him to allow Rosenthal
to remain free. Several have since campaigned for the
Truth In Trials bill ( HR1717 ) that would allow for an
affirmative defense in medical cannabis cases.
"Our fight is not over," said juror Eve Tulley-Dobkin
after Rosenthal's sentencing. "We have to change
the law so that people in Ed Rosenthal's circumstances
do not have to go through what he did, so that jurors
get the full evidence in the trial, so that people who
are in prison get out."
California Attorney General Bill Lockyer also wrote to
Judge Breyer requesting that he impose the minimum sentence
allowed under the federal sentencing guidelines and take
Prop. 215 I into account. When sentencing Rosenthal to
one day with credit for time served, Judge Breyer acknowledged
that Rosenthal had reason to believe that he was following
state and local laws.
Rosenthal asserted during his trial that he had been
promised immunity from prosecution by the city of Oakland,
Calif. which passed a medical marijuana ordinance based
on an exemption in federal statute. But Judge Breyer asserted
in court that a case like Rosenthal's can never happen
again because his rulings assert that municipalities cannot
authorize the cultivation of marijuana. "This judge
is dead wrong," said Rosenthal, who predicts that
the portion of the federal law which allows this provision
will be upheld by the appellate court.
Rosenthal's attorney, Dennis Riordan, said the judge's
acknowledgment that Rosenthal believed he was acting lawfully
will help Rosenthal appeal his conviction to the 9th Circuit
U.S. Court of Appeals. Judge Breyer forbid jurors to hear
arguments that he was entrapped because he relied on the
advice of public officials.
"Judge Breyer gave us a very, very powerful weapon
in the fight to convince the 9th Circuit that it was wrong
to prevent the jury from passing its own judgment on the
reasonability of Ed's belief," says Riordan. "The
federal government view is that the people involved in
this act acted in bad faith and are really drug dealers
at heart. And the judge certainly said today that the
people who are involved in this movement have acted in
good faith and believe in the legality of what they are
doing."
Riordan noted that Rosenthal's sentencing does not directly
impact the current laws on marijuana. But if the appeals
court rules that cities can offer immunity under federal
statutes, he said it could have an "enormous effect"
on the ability of growers and caregivers to provide medical
cannabis. Riordan added that Rosenthal's legal team would
also argue the appeal based on Commerce Clause and 9th
and 10th Amendment issues.
George Bevan, the U.S. prosecutor who tried the case,
had no comment on the sentencing. But Rosenthal said after
his sentencing that Bevan lied to the Grand Jury to secure
his indictment. He added that the judge did him no favors
by handing down a one-day sentence. Rosenthal charged
that Judge Breyer manipulated the evidence at his trial
and called for the judge's resignation.
"This is day one in the crusade to bring down the
marijuana laws, all the marijuana laws," said Rosenthal,
who noted that there are currently 100,000 people in prison
for marijuana crimes. "I don't think one day is justice
- no one should serve any time."
Rosenthal, author of several books on marijuana cultivation,
will remain on supervised release for three years and
pay a $1,300 fine. In the meantime, his wife Jane Klein
says marijuana activists should pressure lawmakers to
change marijuana laws. "This case has shown that
it is worth speaking up, that silence is no longer an
acceptable answer for our political leaders" said
Klein. "Congress are you listening?"
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