(SAN FRANCISCO) – Attorney General
Bill Lockyer today requested a meeting with United States Attorney General
John Ashcroft and Drug Enforcement Agency Director Asa Hutchinson to discuss
the federal government's unprecedented attacks on locally-authorized medical
marijuana operations.
Over the last several months, the
DEA has initiated a string of raids throughout California targeting small,
locally-authorized medical marijuana cooperatives. Yesterday, federal agents
raided a Santa Cruz cooperative that had been working closely with local
law enforcement to ensure compliance with state medical marijuana laws.
Some of the raids have resulted in arrests, yet in several cases, federal
prosecutors have declined to prosecute. In a letter formally requesting
the meeting, Lockyer stated:
"I must also the ethical basis for
the DEA's policy when these raids are being executed without apparent regard
for the likelihood of successful prosecution. Whether or not the U.S. Attorney
decides to file in the Santa Cruz case, my Department is aware of other
recent DEA-initiated raids involving as few as six marijuana plants in
which no charges were ever filed, and no convictions were obtained. Conversations
with DEA representatives in California have made it clear that the DEA's
strategic policy is to conduct these raids as punitive expeditions whether
or not a crime can be successfully prosecuted."
Lockyer further questioned the
timing and wisdom behind the federal government's strategy of using scarce
public safety resources to raid medical marijuana cooperatives:
"A medicinal marijuana provider
such as the Santa Cruz collective represents little danger to the public,
and is certainly not a concern which would warrant diverting scarce federal
resources away from the fight against domestic methamphetamine production,
heroin distribution or international terrorism to cite just a few far more
worthy priorities."
Emphasizing the seemingly petty
nature of federal enforcement activities, Lockyer cited the state's own
record in putting serious, marijuana criminal enterprises out of business:
"During the last three years, my
department's statewide Campaign Against Marijuana Planting (CAMP) program
has taken record amounts of illegal marijuana out of production in California.
By targeting large-scale drug trafficking operations, we've removed billions
of dollars of illegal marijuana that was headed for sale on our streets,
not to sick patients. While we've enjoyed unprecedented success with CAMP,
I'm certain we could be even more
effective if the DEA increased its financial commitment to CAMP, perhaps
by the same amount it is now spending on raids which have the effect of
targeting the state's seriously ill residents rather than criminal organizations."
In November of 1996 California voters
approved Proposition 215 permitting access to marijuana for medicinal purposes
with more than 55 percent of the vote. Since that time, seven other states
(Alaska, Arizona, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Oregon and Washington) have
enacted similar laws. While federal law makes no exception for the medicinal
use of marijuana, federal efforts targeting authorized California cooperatives
operating in compliance with state law have only occurred since 2001.
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For information about Medical Cannabis contact:
Oakland Cannabis
Buyers' Cooperative
P.O. Box 70401, Oakland, CA 94612-0401
Office (510) 832-5346 -
Fax (510) 986-0534
email: ocbc@rxcbc.org