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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
CONTACT: Americans for Safe Access ASA Chief Counsel Joe Elford 415-573-7842 or ASA Media Liaison Kris Hermes 510-681-6361 |
Judge to Hear Contempt Charges for Montebello's Defiance of Medical Marijuana Law
City refused to return patient's property despite court order and established case law
LOS ANGELES - October 12 - A superior court judge will hear oral arguments Tuesday in a case that charges the City of Montebello with contempt for refusing to return a medical marijuana patient's property despite a court order and established case law. National advocacy group Americans for Safe Access (ASA) took on the case of medical marijuana patient Terry Walker after Montebello repeatedly spurned Walker's efforts to seek the return of his wrongfully seized property. "Montebello has absolutely no legal leg to stand on," said ASA Chief Counsel Joe Elford, who will be arguing Tuesday on behalf of Walker. "The city cannot brazenly defy a court order as well as established case law on medical marijuana without facing the consequences."
Coincidentally, the Montebello contempt hearing comes less than a week after the Montebello Country Club hosted an anti-medical marijuana training for law enforcement, which was organized by the California Narcotics Officers Association (CNOA). Advocates argued that the CNOA training on the "eradication" of medical marijuana dispensaries was blatantly contemptuous of state law and held protests last Thursday outside the country club.
What: Oral arguments in medical marijuana case charging the City of Montebello with contemptThe police officer responsible for overseeing Walker's property, as well as other Montebello city officials, will be cross-examined on Tuesday as to their role in the obstruction of Walker's rights. The contempt brief filed by ASA in December of 2008 points to the California Code of Civil Procedure, which makes punishable by contempt of court "disobedience of any lawful judgment, order, or process of the court." In addition, ASA's brief states that, "courts have the inherent power to punish acts that interfere with the orderly conduct of proceedings," such as those in Walker's case.
When: Tuesday, October 13th at 8:30am
Where: Los Angeles Superior Court, Department 122 at 210 West Temple Street, Los Angeles
On October 15, 2004, local police seized marijuana plants, growing equipment, and personal correspondence from the Montebello home of Terry Walker. Police criminally charged Walker, irrespective of his status as a medical marijuana patient. Walker's criminal case was soon after dismissed and a court order was issued for the return of his property. However, despite Walker's court order, the City of Montebello refused on several occasions to return any of his property. "Given recent case law requiring police and local officials to respect state law and return wrongfully seized medical marijuana, the City of Montebello has a clear obligation to adhere," continued Elford. "This blatant contempt for the rule of law is unacceptable and cities like Montebello will be called out if such conduct continues."
In November 2007, the California Fourth District Court of Appeal issued
a 41-page decision rejecting the argument that the state's medical
marijuana law is preempted by federal marijuana laws. The court of
appeal ruled that "it is not the job of the local police to
enforce the federal drug laws." The case City of Garden Grove v.
Superior Court involved medical marijuana patient and Garden Grove
resident Felix Kha who was charged after a routine traffic stop and 1/3
of an ounce of medical marijuana was seized. As a result of the
appellate court
decision, the City of Garden Grove, and all other localities in
California, are now obligated to return wrongfully seized medical
marijuana. In December of 2008, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to
review Garden Grove's appeal.
For further information:
ASA's December 2008 contempt brief filed in Los Angeles Superior Court:
http://AmericansForSafeAccess.
2007 Garden Grove Decision by the California Fourth Appellate
District Court:
http://AmericansForSafeAccess.
Flyer for last week's anti-medical marijuana training in Montebello:
http://AmericansForSafeAccess.

2 Comments so far
Show Allfor the ncoa its really a self preservation issue. legal
drugs = no job. and maybe their silent job - sale of seized
drugs to " approved drug dealers" always happened always
will happen. perhaps jailing the jailer will bring them
new insight into the craziness of their lives. i hope
if they do go to jail they get treated as they treated
others!everyone know the real motto of police departments
in the us? its not to protect and serve but rather" we may
be dumb but we are mean!" why is the really crazy shit in law enforcement always in california?
It's not just California; it's EVERYWHERE!
And they're trying to preserve much, much more than their jobs (for surely they would be reabsorbed into the mainstream police department); they (including politicians) are addicted to the abusive property seizure laws that were passed in the heyday of anti-drug hysteria. You have $5,000 cash on you and tests indicate minute traces of cocaine (as nearly every piece of paper money in the U.S. tests) and kiss your money goodbye. Cars, houses, airplanes, boats -- even I-pods and digital cameras -- all get confiscated and are then "owned" by the seizing agency, whether that be federal, state or local. You want to sue to get your property that was confiscated illegally returned to you? You have to post a cash bond in the anount of the item(s) seized just to roll the dice of justice and see if the courts will even take your case!
There are a LOT of police driving around in VERY expensive autos thanks to these laws. A lot of the property gets sold off at auction and good luck to anyone trying to track what happens to the money.
It's way past time to end this nonsense and legalize all drugs. Treat addiction/abuse as the medical issue that it actually is (or let's start jailing people with hypertension and diabetes and cancer) and educate young people to look at drugs the same way they should look at alcohol and cigarettes (although, to be perfectly honest, I STILL don't see what all the fuss is about when it comes to weed, but that's another post altogether.)
kgarry
"no gods, no masters" --m. sanger