Hrmmm. Are Governor Bush's daughters going to move?

---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Thu, 12 Sep 2002 10:35:30 -0700
From: Nora Callahan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Nov-L: Calif. City Plans Marijuana Giveaway

City Plans Protest With Pot Giveaway

By MARTHA MENDOZA
.c The Associated Press 

Calif. City Plans Marijuana Giveaway

SANTA CRUZ, Calif. (AP) - City leaders plan to join medical marijuana
users 
at a pot giveaway at City Hall next week, hoping to send a message to
federal 
authorities that, in this town, medical marijuana is welcome.

The invitation comes one week after agents from the Drug Enforcement
Agency 
arrested the high-profile owners of a pot farm and confiscated 130
plants 
that had been grown to be used as medicine.

``It's just absolutely loathsome to me that federal money, energy and
staff 
time would be used to harass people like this,'' said vice mayor Emily 
Reilly, who with several City Council colleagues plans to pass out
medical 
marijuana to sick people from the garden-like courtyard at City Hall on 
Tuesday.

Though the council passed a resolution denouncing the raid, there is no 
official city sponsorship of the event - council members and medical 
marijuana advocates are simply acting on their own in a public space,
said 
City Attorney John Barisone.

DEA spokesman Richard Meyer was surprised at the plan.

``Are you serious? That's illegal. It's like they're flouting federal
law,'' 
he said. ``I'm shocked that city leaders would promote the use of
marijuana 
that way. What is that saying to our youth?''

State law in California, as well as Alaska, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine,
Nevada, 
Oregon and Washington, allows marijuana to be grown and distributed to
people 
with a doctor's prescription. Federal law prohibits marijuana use under
any 
circumstances.

In recent months, federal agents - working without local support - have
been 
busting pot clubs and farms in Northern California, including a small
pot 
farm last week about 55 miles south of San Francisco, arresting owners 
Valerie and Michael Corral.

No indictment was filed against the couple, leading activists for
medical 
marijuana; their attorney said federal authorities do not plan to
prosecute. 
A spokeswoman for the U.S. attorney's office said she could not comment.

California medical marijuana growers and distributors work closely with
local 
law enforcement, and are quite open about their programs. In fact, the
farm 
raided by DEA agents had been featured in national media, and the
program is 
listed in the local telephone book.

``The courage of the Santa Cruz City Council and the growing anger in 
Congress are signs of a genuine grassroots rebellion all across this
country 
that will put an end to these attacks on the sick and vulnerable,'' said 
Robert Kampia, executive director of the Washington, D.C.-based
Marijuana 
Policy Project.

In 1992, 77 percent of Santa Cruz voters approved a measure ending the 
prohibition of medical marijuana. Four years later, state voters
approved 
Proposition 215, allowing marijuana for medicinal purposes. And in 2000,
the 
city council approved an ordinance allowing medical marijuana to be
grown and 
used without a prescription.

   
09/11/02 22:21 EDT
    

Copyright 2002 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP
news 
report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise
distributed 
without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.  All active 
hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
-- 

Nora Callahan
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