Pubdate: Tue, 29 Aug 2000
Source: Marin Independent Journal (CA)
Copyright: 2000 Marin Independent Journal
Contact:  150 Alameda del Prado, Novato, CA 94949
Website: http://www.marinij.com/
Author: Guy Ashley, KAMENA RECALL BATTLE INTENSIFIES

The founder of Marin's only dispensary of medical marijuana says her 
organization has joined the petition drive seeking to oust District 
Attorney Paula Kamena in a special election next year - and will wield an 
army of petition gatherers and a $15,000 war chest to sweep Kamena out of 
office.

Lynette Shaw of the Marin Alliance for Medical Marijuana blames Kamena for 
a "100 percent eradication policy'' that steers local law enforcement 
officers to pluck all marijuana plants they come upon, including those 
later found to have been cultivated for legitimate medical use.

"Paula Kamena is trying to suspend Proposition 215 in Marin County,'' Shaw 
said, referring to the landmark medical marijuana initiative passed by 
California voters in 1996.

Kamena said Shaw is wrongly blaming her for actions of local police 
departments that act independently of the criminal prosecutors in her 
office. She said Shaw is using the recall effort to exact payback for 
county policies toward medical marijuana with which Shaw has long disagreed.

"Whenever the police do something that Lynette Shaw finds offensive, she 
seems to believe I am responsible - and that's just not correct,'' Kamena said.

The entrance of Shaw's group into the fray could mark a sharp escalation in 
the battle over whether Kamena and four Marin Superior Court judges could 
be recalled at the polls next year.

Shaw said four medical marijuana advocates have donated $15,000 to aid the 
petition drive seeking Kamena's recall. She said the money will be used to 
pay workers $1 per valid signature obtained in the petition drive, which 
aims to force a special election next May asking voters to remove Kamena 
from office. The recall movement needs to gather about 14,000 signatures by 
Nov. 16 for an election to be called.

Kamena and four judges - Michael Dufficy, Terrence Boren, Lynn Duryee and 
Verna Adams - are  targeted in the petition drive, which until now focused 
on decisions each elected official made in heated child custody matters.

Though the Marin Alliance is focusing its energy on Kamena, the group's 
participation in the recall battle could spell bad news for the judges as 
well. Shaw said many of the Alliance-sponsored signature gatherers carry 
petitions with the judges' names on them.

Don Solem, the Mill Valley political consultant hired by the judges to help 
counter the recall campaign, said he is not overly concerned about medical 
marijuana advocates entering the recall fray.

"We have heard for more than a month that they were getting involved - they 
even advertised in a West Marin newspaper looking for signature 
gatherers,'' Solem said. "Since then, we haven't seen any signs of a 
groundswell of support for the recall campaign against the judges.''

Solem said paying signature gatherers is a tactic used throughout the state.

"The initiative process has been taken over by paid signature-takers,'' he 
said.

Shaw said her group's entrance into the campaign makes it certain that the 
effort to force a recall election against Kamena will succeed. "Whether the 
election includes the judges is a tougher call,'' she said.

She said the group has had three full-time signature gatherers working in 
Marin for the past month, and seven part-timers. "We've recenyly hired our 
own campaign consultant and we're trying to recruit more help,'' she said.

Shaw has been critical of county policies toward medical marijuana for years.

Two years ago, she called for a boycott of a county certification program 
that aimed to help law enforcement officials identify legitimate users of 
medical pot, and navigate the murky legal issues left in the wake of Prop. 
215's passage.

Shaw's wrath intensified when it was revealed that of the eight people who 
sought county certificates, three were later arrested and one had his 
marijuana plants seized by authorities.

Prosecution guidelines adopted by Kamena's office last year made county 
certification a central requirement for people seeking a medical exemption 
to avoid prosecution for possession or cultivation of marijuana.

Shaw said the guidelines were no good because some local police departments 
disregard them by seizing any marijuana they found and sending cases to the 
district attorney even when  guidelines had been met.

Some Alliance members have since had plants seized on several occasions, 
even after Kamena's office has accepted their claims of legitimate medical 
use and declined to file charges. The biggest problem, Shaw said, is that 
seized plants have always been destroyed, leaving her clients without the 
medicine they need.

Signs of a growing schism between Kamena and advocates of medical pot have 
emerged even after a recent directive issued by Kamena's office on the 
issue. The directive notified local police for the first time that her 
office would not oppose legal moves to have marijuana plants returned to 
patients who show authorities that they meet the provisions of Prop. 215.

Kamena's memo, issued in the wake of a federal judge's decision in July 
that upheld an Oakland cannabis club's right to distribute medical pot, 
also warned police that charges might not be filed even in cases where all 
criteria in the district attorney's prosecution guidelines have not been met.

"We in the DA's office must base our decisions as to the proof of charges 
before a jury on a case-by-case basis,'' she wrote.

Kamena said her record on medical marijuana is being "distorted'' by Shaw 
because she has a "personal disagreement'' with county policies.

"The sad thing is that we in the DA's office have made a very heroic and 
valiant effort to try to get the law enforcement community to agree to 
guidelines that they can live with and that are reasonable and 
compassionate toward the medical marijuana group,'' Kamena said.

Contact Guy Ashley via e-mail at  ---
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