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vta

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Faulty Search Warrant Upheld; Attack on Patient Cultivation Continues


http://nugmag.com/20...tion-continues/


By: Terrie Best, San Diego Americans for Safe Access


Monday, June 27, 2011 in San Diego Superior Court, the faulty search warrant obtained by a misleading affidavit was upheld in the medical cannabis case of Jason and Sarine Gastrich.


All morning, Deputy DA Ramin Tohidi and attorneys for the defense argued the legitimacy of the warrant which led to felony charges of possession of marijuana for sale, cultivation, and child endangerment (due to the mere presence of marijuana plants in the house).

The mistruths and omissions utilized by law enforcement in the affidavit to convince Judge Whitney to sign the original warrant were evident to everyone in the courtroom; worrisome is they were not evident to the Judge who should have been outraged at what defense arguments labeled as a ‘judicial duping’ by Steve Reed and other law enforcement personnel.

Another issue raised during Monday’s hearing was whether law enforcement had enough probable cause to obtain the search warrant in the first place.

Instead of relying on probable cause, in this case as is typical with most medical cannabis cases in San Diego, law enforcement took advantage of a neighbor’s complaint of cannabis smell as reason enough to invade and destroy the Gastrich residence.

Taking the pieces of the investigation which supported evidence of marijuana and withholding the pieces of evidence which supported that the marijuana was medical and therefore lawful, the cross-sworn officers took their investigation to a California state court in a state were medical cannabis is lawful, and obtained a search warrant based solely on the premise that marijuana was smelled and that marijuana is illegal.

When will patients’ rights be respected by law enforcement? If judges will grant law enforcement the right to break down doors with guns draw simply because of the existence of marijuana in the home, we are all vulnerable to being abused, arrested, and drug through court for exercising our right to choose a medicine that helps us and is lawful by a ballot vote of the people.

In the hearing which lasted just under ten hours over two days, law enforcement investigators vehemently defended their warrant while the defense attempted to tease out just how much evidence pointing to medical cannabis had been kept from the judge and exactly why it was that the Gastrich family caught the attention of the cross jurisdiction Narcotics Task Force, or Team 9 of Operation Green Dope.

Apparently, it all began with a neighbor who became curious and then complained about a greenhouse structure in the Gastrich backyard, specifically a plywood barrier atop the fence between the two yards.

In a letter – which during the hearing caused somewhat of a Perry Mason moment after being whipped out of the lead case agent’s purse and entered into evidence never having been examined even by the prosecution – Gastrich explained the barrier was erected to protect his medical cannabis from the neighboring spot light.

This letter, addressed by Gastrich to neighbor Steve Skinner was subsequently sent to investigators in a series of moves that began with Skinner’s phone call to San Diego City Councilmember Kevin Faulconer a result of which the Narcotics Task Force launched their investigation.

The investigation was fraught with surveillance, K-9 units and a multitude of tactics to determine if marijuana was growing even though the Gastrich letter spoke of the medical cannabis grow and this was a fact neither of the defendants ever hid from.

What was missing from the investigation was even the slightest attempt to substantiate the couple’s garden as a legitimate medical cannabis garden.

Investigators wasted scarce resources to find probable cause for a fact the defendants would have freely admitted but they utterly failed to investigate if the Gastrichs were patients and further, carefully omitted any indication this might be so when they asked a judge if they could violate the 4th Amendment Rights of these citizens.

Special Agent Michelle Sarubbi of the U.S. Forestry lead the eight person swat-style raid including cross-sworn officers Matt Stevens, Steve Reed and a host of other Team Nine members sworn to protect California law but donning DEA hats when it suits them.

The judge was misled and these investigators wasted valuable resources and failed to protect the people or uphold the law.

This is more of the same from San Diego District Attorney Bonnie Dumanis, her fierce fight against patients and her dedication to overturning state law.
 

soil margin

Active member
Veteran
I've heard many stories like this over the past 10 or so years. San Diego is def in top 3 least friendly pot cities in Cali. Still not planning on moving anytime soon though. ;)
 

Stress_test

I'm always here when I'm not someplace else
Veteran
Raids like that make it easier to identify members in politics and law enforcement who need to be voted out and replaced with people who will try and uphold the will of the voters.
 

headiez247

shut the fuck up Donny
Veteran
san diego aint so pot friendly.even if your medical

idk why people assume all areas in Cali are the same in terms of medical friendliness. If you are in San Diego your best bet is to have all paperwork in order and keep your mouth shut.

Don't be a grower and a public mmj advocate unless you would like to be raided.
 

vta

Active member
Veteran
San Diego votes to repeal medical marijuana rules


The San Diego City Council has voted to repeal rules that required the city's roughly 160 medical marijuana dispensaries to shut down and apply for operating permits.

The San Diego Union-Tribune says the council on Monday voted 6-2 to rescind the rules adopted four months ago rather than pay as much as an estimated $1 million on a public vote on the issue.

A coalition of medical marijuana advocates forced the issue when they announced they'd collected enough signatures from registered voters to place a repeal on a future ballot.

The decision leaves the city with no comprehensive policies regarding where or how a collective can operate legally.
 
S

SicKSKills

All the while people up north are walking scott free from a 100 lighter where the police served a bogus warrant for a man that never lived at said address and they 'happened' to stubble upon the warehouse grow on the property.
 

vta

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Mayor not out to shut down medical marijuana shops

San Diego Mayor Jerry Sanders will not increase efforts to shutter medical marijuana dispensaries, instead opting to preserve the status quo while collective operators look to forge their own path to legitimacy.

Last month, the City Council rescinded restrictions on the businesses rather than pay as much as $1 million for a public vote. Council members were forced to act after a coalition of medical marijuana advocates collected enough valid signatures to place a repeal on the ballot.

There were about 165 collectives when the rules were approved in April, all of which were operating illegally under current zoning laws. It remains up to code compliance officers to investigate complaints against collectives and tell them how to address problems, mayoral spokeswoman Rachel Laing said.

“We’re still approaching this on a complaint basis,” she said. “And I suspect that will continue to be the case.”

That Sanders has chosen not to engage in the contentious and potentially expensive process of regulating the proliferation of dispensaries should come as no surprise. City planners were not involved in drafting the regulations, which were slated to take effect without the mayor’s signature.

The prospect of closing down collectives poses logistic and legal problems at a time when the city is straining to provide basic services. San Diego face a $40 million deficit in a $1.1 billion operating budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2012.

“The best use of resources is to get regulations that everyone can live with,” said Bob Selan of Los Angeles, CEO of Kush Magazine and a spokesman for the Patient Care Association. “We applaud the mayor’s decision and think it’s a good idea for everyone involved to have some breathing room.”

Cooperative directors and medical marijuana patients decried the repealed rules as too strict, even as collectives mushroomed at a velocity that has confounded city officials and touched a nerve with some neighborhoods.

The groups successful in overturning the ordinance — Patient Care Association, Citizens for Patient Rights and the California Cannabis Coalition — are working to craft regulations that wouldn’t consign dispensaries to far-flung industrial areas of the city.

Recent recommendations from the city’s medical marijuana task force would serve as a solid foundation for a proposed ordinance or initiative, Selan said.

The repealed rules sought to limit dispensaries to some commercial and industrial zones. Cooperatives would have to be at least 600 feet from schools, playgrounds, libraries, child care and youth facilities, parks, churches and each other.

Still, some community leaders and officials advocated an outright ban. Scott Chipman, chairman of San Diegans for Safe Neighborhoods, for months has been calling on the city to more aggressively enforce existing regulations.

Chipman said inaction on illegal businesses sends a powerful message to all residents that neither they nor city officials need to respect the rule of law where marijuana is concerned.

As it stands, all other businesses must have a business tax certificate, submit to inspections by government agencies such as the health department and comply with a state law that defines the conditions for manufacturing, packaging, labeling, advertising and selling food and drugs, Chipman said.

“With proper code enforcement the mayor could have shut down pot shops as they opened and could still shut down all existing pot shops,” he said.

Many cities and counties have struggled to deal with the rapid growth of dispensaries since state voters approved marijuana for medical use in 1996. Most municipalities waited until the past few years to begin establishing clear rules for storefront operators.

Regionally, only San Diego County has land-use regulations and a formal application process that applies only to unincorporated areas. The vast majority of local cities have either passed bans on dispensaries or used zoning laws to prohibit them. As a result, none have struggled as much as San Diego.

Since April 2009, code enforcement officers have opened 225 cases against dispensaries and made 79 referrals to City Attorney Jan Goldsmith. Code compliance has closed 56 cases, 11 of which were referred to Goldsmith.

Twenty-six collectives have closed down as a result of city attorney enforcement. Five are tied up in litigation brought within the last year and an additional 38 are in various stages of investigation, negotiation or pre-filing status, said Gina Coburn, Goldsmith’s spokeswoman.

The difference between police and code compliance cases is the latter are sometimes filed in civil court with a lower standard of proof.

“As prosecutors, the City Attorney’s Office will take enforcement action when law enforcement or code compliance provides sufficient evidence to meet our standard of proof,” Coburn said. “We will not look the other way on enforcement of the law on these or other cases. Again, however, there are circumstances where enforcement action is taken without the necessity of filing a legal action.”
 

supermanlives

Active member
Veteran
i will have a talk with jerry next time i see him . yes he walks right by an area i hang out drinking coffee every day. wounder if he will actually stop and talk or try an have me arrested LOL
 

BiG H3rB Tr3E

"No problem can be solved from the same level of c
Veteran
i will have a talk with jerry next time i see him . yes he walks right by an area i hang out drinking coffee every day. wounder if he will actually stop and talk or try an have me arrested LOL

hahahahah. we was at the city council meeting about the referendum and we got in a elevator and it went down and stopped at JS's floor and he got on with his body guard and some top level cop. and it is me and my boy on the elevator in the corner. he looked hella nervous to have to interact with anybody like us... even with both his boys + his revolver on his side.

its not so much of ol' jerry we need to worry about as much as it is mrs. guns blazzing bonnie dumanis....
 
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