Compliant or Not, DEA will bust you

Seriously, look how much money they are making (the feds that is)

from
http://www.canorml.org/fedcasessum.html


Pending Cases
  • October 14, 2011 - Federal prosecutors are warning 16 Sacramento-area landlords they could lose their buildings for renting to marijuana dispensaries. United States Attorney Ben Wagner is following through on a threat formally announced at a news conference last Friday, and confirmed the number of landlord letters in an interview Thursday on Capital Public Radio.

  • October 13, 2011 - DEA agents along with BNE and one Mendocino county sheriff deputy raided the garden of Northstone Organics, one of the county-licensed medical marijuana growers. Northstone has been involved in a court case in Sonoma county after two of their drivers were caught there while transporting marijuana to medical patients in the Bay area. A Mendocino sheriff and county supervisor testified on behalf of Northstone in that trial.
    • Also on this day, United States Attorney Benjamin B. Wagner announced that a federal grand jury returned a four-count indictment Mark Bagdasarian and his son Ryan Bagdasarian with conspiring to cultivate and distribute marijuana and possessing marijuana through their Buds 4 Life dispensaries in Fresno. According to the criminal complaint, in June 2011, the Bagdasarian’s stores were searched and law enforcement officers found 3,669 marijuana plants, 219 pounds of processed marijuana, and more than $546,000 in cash. A more recent search yielded another 35 pounds of processed marijuana and $40,000 in cash.
    October 12, 2011 - DEA agents, assisted by Pomona police officers, raided the Green Cross USA dispensary, seizing marijuana, edibles, hashish, hashish oil and some documents as part of an investigation. The property owner had received a letter from DEA threatening civil and criminal charges; local authorities had also moved to close the shop. No arrests have been made.

    • October 5, 2011 - In conjunction with a new federal assault on California's medical marijuana providers, a criminal case was unsealed naming six defendants linked to a now-defunct North Hollywood marijuana collective called NoHo Caregivers. The organization allegedly sold marijuana to other stores, and sent marijuana to affiliates in New York and Pennsylvania - distributed approximately 600 to 700 pounds of marijuana per month, according to the indictment. The indictment also seeks the forfeiture of $14.7 million. The defendants named in the NoHo Caregivers indictment are Paul A. Montoya, Noah Joel Kleinman, Kathy Thabet, James Stanley, Bryant Watson, and Casey Wheat.
    Prosecutors also filed three forfeiture actions against owners of buildings where The Wildomar Patients Compassionate Group, Montclair Caregivers in San Bernardino County, and eight stores located in a two-story strip mall at 26402 Raymond Way in Lake Forest.
    In addition to the criminal case and the forfeiture actions, the United States Attorney's Office sent dozens of letters yesterday to people affiliated with 38 marijuana dispensaries in selected cities across the Southland. Those receiving letters are warned that the stores are operating in violation of federal law and that they have two weeks to "take the necessary steps to discontinue the sale and/or distribution of marijuana" at the stores. The letters note that the operation of a marijuana store "may result in criminal prosecution, imprisonment, fines, and forfeiture of assets, including the real property on which the dispensary is operating and any money you receive (or have received) from the dispensary operator."
    The cities are:
    • Orange County - the cities of Lake Forest, Dana Point, Laguna Hills, Laguna Niguel, and Rancho Santa Margarita;
    • Riverside County - the cities of Murrieta, Wildomar, and Temecula; and
    • Inland Empire - the cities of Pomona, Claremont, Upland, Montclair, and Chino.
    Also receiving a letter was the building owner of the state's longest-operating dispensary, the Marin Alliance for Medical Marijuana in Fairfax. It warns the landlord that he could be liable for imprisonment of up to 40 years, forfeiture of the property, and forfeiture of all rental proceeds from the last 15 years for violating federal law if MAMM isn't evicted.
    Building owners for three dispensaries in San Francisco also received letters, as did the Ocean Beach Wellness Centers and Oasis Herbal Center in San Diego. In recent weeks, federal authorities seized the bank accounts of two dispensaries in Sacramento and announced a $2.4 million tax penalty against Harborside Health Center in Oakland.

  • July 20, 2011 - Jerry Laberdee, Dennis Whited, Russell Blake, Charles Wright and Jon Vivian have been indicted on federal charges that arose from a crackdown on medical marijuana dispensaries in Spokane, Washington earlier this year. The charges carry maximum penalties of 20 years in prison and fines up to $250,000.

  • July 13, 2011 - Ten people have pleaded not guilty to various federal charges of drug-trafficking conspiracy after approximately 30 law enforcement agencies executed 26 criminal search warrants in 13 Montana cities on March 14. Jason D. Burns, Joshua L. Schultz and Jesse D. Leland pleaded not guilty on June 23 to manufacturing, distribution, possession, and money laundering charges in U.S. District Court in Missoula. On June 30, Richard G. Flor, Justin L. Flor and Sherry L. Flor were each charged with 11 felonies, including possession of a firearm during a drug-trafficking offense in U.S. District Court in Billings. On July 6, Jonathan Janetski, Michael Kassner, Tyler Roe and Evan Corum were charged with three counts each in Missoula. An eleventh person is yet to be arrested, according to Assistant U.S. Attorney Jessica Fehr. All of the defendants face a mandatory minimum of five years, and up to 40 years in prison if convicted. The weapons charges against the Flors could lead to life imprisonment. Operators of the Montana Caregivers Association and MCM Caregivers, which were among the targets of the raids, have filed a lawsuit in federal court claiming their constitutional rights were violated. UPDATE: On Sept. 7, 2011, Schultz pleaded guilty on Sept. 7 to a charge of distributing more than 100 kilograms of marijuana. He agreed to forfeit at least $600,000 in cash and a Mercedes car, according to court documents. Leland pleaded guilty on Sept. 13. Both men are scheduled to be sentenced in December. Burns has a hearing scheduled for Sept. 15 on whether he can introduce evidence of Montana's medical marijuana law and entrapment during his trial. Four other men have pleaded guilty in federal court in Missoula in separate cases related to the March dispensary raids.
    Separate from the March raids, Shawn Slattery and Andrew Umhey pleaded guilty to conspiracy to manufacture marijuana, according to a statement from the U.S. Attorney. Prosecutors alleged that from October 2010 to February 2011, Slattery and Umhey operated the Four-Twenty Ranch LLC, where marijuana was produced and stored. In February, law enforcement officers seized 272 marijuana plants and 32.5 pounds of marijuana from the business. Both face a mandatory minimum of five years in prison. They are scheduled to be sentenced on December 22.
    (Source: Medical Marijuana Business Report)


  • January 6, 2011 - Federal authorities in Nevada charge 15 people with selling marijuana through several Las Vegas storefronts, saying they violated medical marijuana laws while simply selling the drug for profit. Authorities said those charged included: John Birmele, Kelly Birmele, Laura Rhoades-Yokoi, John Allen Youngblood, Timothy Hough, Michael Ellsworth, Pierre "Dr. Reefer" Werner, Reynalda Barnett, Clyde Barnett, Ron Teston, Kristen Krusyna, Michael McAuliffe, Katree Darriel Saunders, Chad Uhl, Caroline Dellaville. A spokeswoman for the U.S. attorney said all defendants had been arrested except for Kelly Birmele, Saunders and Uhl. Authorities named five businesses in the complaints: The Happiness Consultant, the Nevada Compassionate Center, Dr. Reefer, LV Fingerprinting and Organic Releaf.

  • September 29, 2010 - DEA and San Diego Sheriffs conduct SWAT-style raids at the home of Donald Lee Hunt Jr. and Donald Lee Hunt Sr., charging them federally with conspiracy to grow over 100 marijuana plants. Hunt Jr. had articles of incorporation and patient records for a medical marijuana cultivating collective, which did not dispense. After 23 plants for his own use and one ounce of dried marijuana were found at his residence, Hunt Sr. was also charged. The elder Hunt developed painful plantar fasciitis in his heel while working as a bellman for the Hyatt Regency for 27 years; he also suffers from glaucoma. Facing prison sentences of 5 years or more, the Hunts pled guilty to lesser charges and now face 12-18 months (Sr.) and 21-27 months (Jr.) in federal prison. Sentencing is scheduled for April 25, 2011 at 9:30am in front of Judge Larry Burns.


  • July 9, 2010 - Federal agents arrested 12 people in San Diego county who they said were connected to a large-scale pot dealer. That suspect, Joshua Hester, was arrested in West Hollywood. In court papers, agents said Hester, 29, distributed 3,000 pounds of marijuana he purchased from a major Los Angeles dealer in 2007 and 2008 and was the silent owner of the Downtown Kush Lounge in downtown San Diego and the Green Kross Collective in Mission Beach, co-owned by Joseph Nunes (see below). The other 11 people arrested in the case had varying involvement with Hester. Some are accused of being runners for him, one was a real estate agent accused of helping him buy property fraudulently, and others worked in the collectives. Source.
 

darkliight

Member
Holy shit, how old are they?! Thats gotta be some record to have civil war vets still alive!

But seriously, how well are these old ass people going to be in battle nowadays?
LMAO, I don't know. Just lock the brakes on their wheelchairs and let em fire away.

Alabama is pretty conservative. they'll have a hell of a time passing that one. not saying it can't be done but i bet there are far more that oppose than support mmj.
Alabama lawmakers have been pushing to legalize MMJ for a few years now. Last year the bill made it through committee and wasn't voted on in time, and the session ended before a hearing. However, the recent legislative election got rid of many the older house members out, and brought more from the younger generation (30-40 y/o). Rep. K. L. Brown (R) is sponsoring the bill and has high hopes for its success. Fingers crossed that the House will make a decision based on facts and logic rather than ignorance and fear.

I got a link on their proposed bill. I approve but then again, I'm not a politician lol.

http://www.ammjc.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/AMMPRA.pdf

No more than 8 oz. dry on person
Limit of 12 plants (6 immature/6 mature) per patient
Qualifying medical conditions are pretty much the same as it it for other states.
 

Jogro

Well-Known Member
Guess what. . .
Marijuana is still illegal in all 50 states.
Just because a few states tolerate marijuana under a "medical" (ie fig leaf) regime, that doesn't make it legal.
And that will remain true unless and until Federal law is changed.
Rant over.
 

Jogro

Well-Known Member
LMAO, I don't know. Just lock the brakes on their wheelchairs and let em fire away.



Alabama lawmakers have been pushing to legalize MMJ for a few years now. Last year the bill made it through committee and wasn't voted on in time, and the session ended before a hearing. However, the recent legislative election got rid of many the older house members out, and brought more from the younger generation (30-40 y/o). Rep. K. L. Brown (R) is sponsoring the bill and has high hopes for its success. Fingers crossed that the House will make a decision based on facts and logic rather than ignorance and fear.

I got a link on their proposed bill. I approve but then again, I'm not a politician lol.

http://www.ammjc.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/AMMPRA.pdf

No more than 8 oz. dry on person
Limit of 12 plants (6 immature/6 mature) per patient
Qualifying medical conditions are pretty much the same as it it for other states.
I'm not holding my breath for medical MJ in the socially conservative state of AL.

Still, if it actually can pass THERE, it should be able to pass in just about every other state, which means that Federal deregulation can't be all that far behind either.
 

toasterblt

Active Member
Just because your state legalizes it, doesnt mean the feds wont come a knocking. but seriously though, the fed dont really care about gardens under 100 plants, unless your throwing the garden in their face in one way or another.

There is nothing in the laws about getting a whole bunch of patients together and growing 6 plants each. WA just passed laws that you can have up to 10 patient collectives, but you only get 45 plants. Where as a single patient can have 15.

I for one wouldnt have a garden push past the original stated limit for one patient. Ive seen gardens that had 3 cards, 35 plants, which is 10 under the limit, get taken down by local cops. Just grow your own, keep it within the limits, and you will be fine. If you cant grow your own, have someone else do it but make sure they dont have 20 other people there growing for too otherwise one day your going to be without medicine.
 

MacGuyver4.2.0

Well-Known Member
Guess what. . .
Marijuana is still illegal in all 50 states.
Just because a few states tolerate marijuana under a "medical" (ie fig leaf) regime, that doesn't make it legal.
And that will remain true unless and until Federal law is changed.
Rant over.
With clueless idiots like THIS that were *appointed* by President Obama, the DEA's days are numbered. Lets not forget that college kid they almost killed who was locked up for 5 days with no food or water either!
https://www.rollitup.org/legalization-marijuana/539544-what-drug-war-looks-like.html
 

Jogro

Well-Known Member
With clueless idiots like THIS that were *appointed* by President Obama, the DEA's days are numbered. Lets not forget that college kid they almost killed who was locked up for 5 days with no food or water either!
The President doesn't make the cannabis laws, nor does he enjoy the legal ability to reverse them. At best he just enforces them.

If you don't want the DEA busting people for growing weed, you have to reform the cannabis laws, not pray and hope that THIS WEEK the current Presidential administration decides its going to look the other way at medical growers.

On the kid the DEA locked up for five days, that incident was related to a broader bust involving mostly ecstacy, with a small amount of cannabis. Obviously that doesn't excuse what I believe constitutes criminal negligence on the part of the DEA, I'm just saying that legalizing cannabis probably wouldn't have prevented that incident.

Also, as a simply policy matter, unless you want to totally legalize EVERY recreational drug (including cocaine, heroin, amphetamines, bath salts, etc), you're still going to need SOME sort of Federal law enforcement to enforce Federal drug laws. Even if cannabis were entirely legalized tomorrow, enjoying the same legal status as parsley, you'd still "need" a DEA.
 

cary schellie

Active Member
if that fool in the clip would of grew indoors and stayed under 99 he wouldnt be crying. if people get greedy they go down
 
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