Friday, June 24, 2005
-
12:00 AM
|
Mooneys arrested for distribution, possession
of
peyote
Nick Nelson DAILY
HERALD
Local
medicine man James Warren "Flaming Eagle" Mooney was out walking
his
dog Thursday morning when agents from the U.S. Drug Enforcement
Administration
approached him with an arrest warrant.
James
Mooney and his wife, Linda, were arrested near their Spanish Fork home on
16
combined drug charges involving possession and distribution of peyote.
Each
of
the charges carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in
prison.
Nicholas
Stark, an Ogden man with ties to
Oklevueha
EarthWalks Native
America Church,
which the Mooneys founded in 1997, was also named in the federal indictment.
In
the indictment, which was filed June 15 but sealed until Thursday
morning,
Stark was charged for distribution and possession of peyote and for
possession
of coca leaves.
The
Mooneys and Stark have an initial hearing in front of U.S. Magistrate Judge
Sam
Alba at the federal courthouse in Salt
Lake City at 11 a.m. today. Linda Mooney was booked
at
Davis County Jail and James Mooney at Weber County Jail on Thursday evening
to
be held until the arraignment.
In
June
2004, the Utah Supreme Court exonerated the Mooneys from more than a
dozen
felony drug charges the Utah County Attorney's Office had brought against
them
in November 2000. The landmark ruling stated that religious leaders like
Mooney
could not be prosecuted for distributing peyote to non-American Indians as
part
of a legitimate religious ceremony -- even if those leaders are not members
of
federally recognized American Indian
tribe.
But
the
state court's ruling is not binding on courts or agencies, and federal
courts
have ruled in the past that the use of peyote, a hallucinogenic cactus and a
Schedule
I controlled substance, is illegal except in "bona fide"
religious
ceremonies by members of federally recognized
tribes.
U.S.
Attorney Paul Warner stated in a news release Thursday that the Mooneys
and
Stark, who do not claim membership in a federally recognized tribe,
broke
federal drug
laws.
"We
believe the Mooneys and Mr. Stark are not allowed to use peyote under
federal
law," he said. "Drug dealers engaged in the distribution of
a
controlled substance are going to be
prosecuted."
Melodie
Rydalch, spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney's Office in Salt Lake City, said the indictment
also
challenges James Mooney's status as American Indian and his tribal membership.
"The
indictment alleges that he is not a Native American, not a member of
a
federally recognized tribe and therefore is not entitled under federal law
to
possess or distribute a controlled substance," she said. Rydalch
said
federal prosecutors would push to have the Mooneys jailed until the case
is
resolved because the couple is a risk to the
community.
Kathryn
Collard, a Salt Lake
attorney who represented the Mooneys and Oklevueha EarthWalks in
Utah courts, blasted
the
DEA and the U.S. Attorney's Office for what she described as a
"witch
hunt" against her former
clients.
"I
think it's the drug war run amok," she said. "I think they do
it
because they can. They have the power, they have the money, they have
hundreds
of attorneys and all kinds of people to do their bidding."
The
Mooneys' current attorney, Randall Marshall, was out of town Thursday and
did
not return telephone
calls.
David
Hamblin, a friend of the Mooneys and a spiritual leader of
Oklevueha
EarthWalks, said Mooney was out walking his dog and speaking to Hamblin on
a
mobile phone Thursday morning when federal agents stopped
Mooney.
"He
was approached by DEA agents that told him to take his dog back home and
that
they were going to arrest him," Hamblin said. "I could hear
their
voices on the
phone."
Justin
Schoenrock, James Mooney's 26-year-old stepson who was at the Mooney's
home
Thursday, said the agents arrested Mooney just before 9 a.m.
He
said
his mother, Linda Mooney, called him from her workplace at about the same
time
and said she would come home shortly. Linda Mooney was arrested as she
drove
home from her workplace, Schoenrock said. He said the agents gave
no
explanation of the
arrest.
"They
didn't tell me anything," he said.
Schoenrock
said the Mooney's younger children were out of state visiting family when
their
parents were arrested.
DEA
agents visited the Mooneys' home and the office of a former bookkeeper
for
Oklevueha EarthWalks last week but did not serve any
warrants.
This story appeared in The
Daily
Herald
Much love,
George
George
Bertelstein
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
1942
10th
Avenue
San
Francisco, CA
94116
415-948-5430