Tracknum: 124811003926354
Pubdate: Tue, 23 Oct 2001
Source: Knoxville News-Sentinel (TN)
Copyright: 2001 The Knoxville News-Sentinel Co.
Contact:  http://www.knoxnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/226
Author: Wayne Wilson, Sacramento Bee
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)

JUDGE RULES COUPLE'S FILES FROM RAID NOT PROTECTED BY PRIVILEGE

Thousands of files seized by federal drug agents from an attorney-physician 
couple who advocate the medical use of marijuana need not be returned, a 
judge ruled Tuesday.

U.S. Magistrate Gregory G. Hollows rejected the attorney-client privilege 
asserted by the operators of California Medical Research Center in the El 
Dorado County town of Cool, but set up rigid rules by which the 
still-sealed records may be reviewed.

Neither attorney Dale C. Schafer nor his wife, Dr. Marion "Molly" P. Fry, 
would discuss Hollows' findings, saying they had not yet seen the 28-page 
order.

Their lawyer, J. David Nick of San Francisco, could not be reached for 
comment, but after Monday's hearing in U.S. District Court in Sacramento he 
characterized the government's campaign against the pair as an "unsavory 
attempt" to instill fear in seriously ill Californians.

The offices of Schafer and Fry, along with their nearby Greenwood residence 
and a storage unit in Cool, were raided Sept. 28-29.

A U-Haul truck transported the seized computerized and paper files to 
Sacramento, where they have been placed in a locked room on the 16th floor 
of the federal courthouse.

Schafer and Fry have yet to be formally charged with a crime, but drug 
agents alleged in the affidavit for a search warrant that the lawyer and 
doctor were engaged in a scheme to unlawfully prescribe, cultivate and sell 
marijuana.

The government called it a marijuana prescription "tag team" with the 
doctor recommending pot therapy and the attorney advising patients how to 
avoid conviction.

At Monday's hearing on the Schafer-Fry motion to return their files, 
attorney Nick argued that the government is on a "fishing expedition," 
looking for evidence that would implicate thousands of sick people who use 
marijuana medicinally.

Nick said the Compassionate Use Act, a 1996 state ballot measure, permits 
Californians to employ pot therapy when it is recommended by a doctor.

But Assistant U.S. Attorney Anne Pings said that possession or distribution 
of marijuana is a federal crime, regardless of one's claimed medical needs.

And, she said, the actions of Schafer and Fry went beyond the mere 
recommendation of marijuana therapy.

"Attorney Schafer did more than advise clients about the ins and outs of 
medical marijuana, including how to avoid prosecution or how to act after 
an arrest," Hollows noted in his findings.

"He coupled that advice with sales of marijuana, distribution of marijuana 
clones, as well as the organization of a business with his doctor-wife for 
the mass distribution of marijuana through allegedly unlawful recommendations.

"At this point, there is probable cause to believe that attorney Schafer 
not only advised his customers to possess marijuana in violation of federal 
law, he took steps to ensure that possession," Hollows declared. Schafer 
advertised on the Internet and in local papers, offering marijuana 
recommendations from his business, Hollows stated.

But "he affirmatively told his purported clients from the inception of 
their meeting that he was not their attorney," Hollows said, quoting a 
question-answer sheet "apparently given to ... Schafer's customers":

Q: Is Mr. Schafer my attorney?

A: No. Dale C. Schafer (has) provided you with legal consultation to assist 
you in understanding (the applicable law) and how to keep you out of 
trouble with law enforcement.

With that in mind, Magistrate Hollows reasoned, "Attorney Schafer's clients 
could not have had a reasonable basis to believe that they were submitting 
confidential information to their lawyer."

Thus, there was no attorney-client privilege, he found.

Recognizing the "sensitive" nature of the seized documents, Hollows ruled 
that the government will be allowed access to some of the files only after 
they've been reviewed by a "special master" for the purpose of establishing 
relevance.

The medical records themselves will not be opened because, under the 
government's theory that all marijuana use is unlawful, any reason for such 
use is not relevant, the magistrate noted.