Published in the
Oakland Tribune on Thursday, February 22nd, 2007
"Guru of Ganja" Ed Rosenthal is bringing in another
martyr of the marijuana movement to help him raise funds
for his upcoming federal trial.
Tommy Chong -- half of of the Cheech and Chong comedy
duo renowned for stoner movie classics such as "Up in
Smoke" and "Nice Dreams" -- will appear a $125-per-head
event March 4 at Rosenthal's Lake Avenue home in
Piedmont. Some advance tickets are available for only
$100 at Rosenthal's legal defense fund's Web site,
www.green-aid.com.
"The party will celebrate how far we've come in
legalizing medical marijuana as well as provide me with
the money I need to fund my current trial that is
defending all of our rights," Rosenthal, 62, said in an
e-mail Thursday. He's scheduled to appear in federal
court March 19, and he estimates his trial and related
expenses could cost more than $300,000.
Chong was prosecuted, convicted and served nine
months in federal prison a few years ago as part of a
federal crackdown on purveyors of drug paraphernalia;
he'd financed and promoted a line of glass water pipes
often used for smoking marijuana, and he said he pleaded
guilty to prevent charges from being filed against his
wife and son. The case made Chong, already beloved for
his comedy act, a poster boy among marijuana advocates.
Famed for his marijuana cultivation books and the
"Ask Ed" column he wrote for High Times magazine,
Rosenthal was convicted of three marijuana-growing
felonies in 2003, more than a year after federal agents
raided sites including his Oakland home, an Oakland
warehouse in which he was growing marijuana, and a San
Francisco medical marijuana club he supplied.
Medical use of marijuana on a doctor's recommendation
is legal under state law but prohibited by federal law,
so Rosenthal was barred from mounting a medical defense
at trial. A judge sentenced him to one day behind bars
-- time he'd already served.
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned his
convictions in April 2006, finding juror misconduct -- a
juror's conversation with an attorney-friend during
deliberations -- compromised Rosenthal's right to a fair
verdict and so warranted a new trial. But the court also
rejected Rosenthal's claim of immunity from prosecution
as an officer of Oakland who grew the drug under the
city's medical marijuana ordinance.
Federal prosecutors filed a new indictment with
additional charges in October, essentially claiming
Rosenthal from October 2001 through February 2002
conspired with Kenneth Hayes and Richard Watts to grow
marijuana at sites on Sixth Street in San Francisco and
on Mandela Parkway in Oakland; laundered marijuana
proceeds by buying four money orders totaling $1,854
during that time; and falsified tax returns for 1999,
2000 and 2001 by omitting income from his marijuana
distribution.
Hayes and Watts face similar, related charges. Both
were charged after the same 2002 raids that nabbed
Rosenthal, but injuries sustained in a car accident have
kept Watts from trial until now and Hayes fled to Canada
just before he was indicted.
Contact Josh Richman at
jrichman@angnewspapers.com or (510) 208-6428.