Raids to...continue?

mr.red

Well-Known Member
Hmmm, I checked the link and had no troubles loading the page..

I am guessing neither did MediMaryUser, lol

bongsmilie
 

ugzkmk

Well-Known Member
http://www.mercurynews.com/breakingnews/ci_11857228?nclick_check=1&forced=true

check the address bar, mine came up with 2 urls for some reason, had to edit it down.

Memo: US atty banned charges on medical marijuana
The Associated Press
Posted: 03/06/2009 08:15:58 PM PST

LOS ANGELES—The U.S. attorney in Los Angeles ordered prosecutors to stop filing charges against medical marijuana dispensaries in a confidential memo last week, but then abruptly lifted the ban on Friday, according to a published report.

The initial order from U.S. Attorney Thomas P. O'Brien was reported by the Los Angeles Times, citing three people who read the memo but requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly on the matter.

O'Brien's order came two days after Attorney General Eric Holder seemed to imply that medical marijuana prosecutions would not be a priority for the Justice Department under President Barack Obama. California law permits medicinal use of marijuana, but the federal government has not recognized those laws and has continued raids in the state.

O'Brien's order was included in a Feb. 27 e-mail written by Christine Ewell, head of the U.S. attorney's criminal division, according to the Times. The newspaper's sources said the memo told prosecutors to stop issuing subpoenas or applying for search warrants.

Ewell sent out another e-mail several hours after the first telling prosecutors not to discuss the memo with anyone outside the U.S. attorney's office, the sources said.

A Justice Department official said Friday that the attorney general did not direct O'Brien or any other U.S. attorney to change their policies on marijuana cases.

Another e-mail came out Friday telling prosecutors to resume working on medical marijuana cases. O'Brien declined to explain why he issued the memo and later rescinded it.

California voters approved Proposition 215 in 1996, which made it legal to sell marijuana to people who have a doctor's prescription. Since that time, hundreds of dispensaries have opened in the state.

Twelve other states also allow medical marijuana under certain conditions, but federal law bans the drug.

During the Bush administration, federal agents raided medical marijuana clinics, prosecuted suppliers and pressured property owners to evict marijuana dispensaries.

Obama had promised a change in direction.

"I'm not going to be using Justice Department resources to try to circumvent state laws on this issue," Obama told the Mail Tribune of Medford, Ore., in March.

At a press conference on Feb. 25, Holder was asked about five California raids in which federal agents seized marijuana and cash in South Lake Tahoe and Los Angeles.

"What the president said during the campaign, you'll be surprised to know, will be consistent with what we'll be doing here in law enforcement," Holder told reporters.
 

mr.red

Well-Known Member
Why thank you uzgkmk

I was just about to do that.

But yeah, the attorney general's office said it.

bongsmilie
 

fdd2blk

Well-Known Member
so there were no raids? just an intern jumping the gun on a press release? i'm confused.
it's like you all want this to fail. =/
 

mr.red

Well-Known Member
Nooooooo, I was just helping get the word out that they never really meant the raids would stop.

At least according to this latest news...

Meaning that a raid could still happen at any time.

I don't want it to fail, just thought everyone should know that the raids in essence are still on.

bongsmilie
 

fdd2blk

Well-Known Member
Nooooooo, I was just helping get the word out that they never really meant the raids would stop.

At least according to this latest news...

Meaning that a raid could still happen at any time.

I don't want it to fail, just thought everyone should know that the raids in essence are still on.

bongsmilie
i was generalizing again. :)

"they never meant the raids to stop"? you are making that up. it doesn't say that. they jumped the gun. that's all i see. the reins got pulled back a little, run to fast and you might fall. have there been any new raids in the past 10 days? let the actions speak.
 

fdd2blk

Well-Known Member
wait, .........................

post #1

Raids to Continue ................. "read it and weep".
what does that mean? "read it and weep".

then you say "figures", and try to blame it on Obama.

all negative.
 

mr.red

Well-Known Member
Haha, well.

I accept this.

But in reality my blame is directed toward the attorney general and the attorney general's office in general.

Not to get into a political debate but this whole administration has been very hypocritical.

bongsmilie
 

jordisgarden

Well-Known Member
why cant the cops just leave us alone. we aint hurtin nobody. wtf. i dont bother anyone. why would they bother me. i dont sell. i smoke and enjoy.
 

TemporarySaint

Active Member
wait, .........................

post #1

Raids to Continue ................. "read it and weep".
what does that mean? "read it and weep".

then you say "figures", and try to blame it on Obama.

all negative.

I agree with fdd, here. And with fdd's former assessment as well. Are we reading the same article, Red?






I agree with the hypocrisy acussation, but I think that, until I see otherwise, we're moving in the right direction. N.J., Tenn., Texas and Ill. have all introduced positive marijuana legislation and, of course, you've got the Cali Legalization bid too. Plus no new raids since the AG's announcement. Let's keep it going.

Rastaman Vibration yea-ah!!! Positive!!!
 

mr.red

Well-Known Member
Haha fine fine.

Perhaps I was a bit worked up when I read that medical marijuana policies have not changed.

I am very glad no raids have occurred but am still a bit irked by the whole thing.


fdd is that your grow??

Amazing either way.
 
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