Pubdate: Thu, 25 Jul 2002
Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA)
Webpage: 
www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2002/07/25/B
A13548.DTL
Copyright: 2002 Hearst Communications Inc.
Contact:  http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/388
Author: Pamela J. Podger, Chronicle Staff Writer

BARBARA SWEENEY -- MEDICAL POT ACTIVIST

Marin County AIDS and medical marijuana activist Barbara Sweeney died July 
21 at Marin General Hospital from pancreatitis. She was 49.

Ms. Sweeney is survived by her 12-year-old daughter, Cassie, who will be 
raised by guardians that her mother selected in the final years of her 
13-year battle with AIDS and hepatitis C.

Ms. Sweeney helped start and manage the now-defunct Flower Therapy clinic 
in San Francisco for medical marijuana. She was named by activist Dennis 
Peron as one of the people who inspired him to co-write state Proposition 
215, the 1996 voter-approved initiative that legalized the medical use of 
marijuana.

Friends said Ms. Sweeney frequently spoke about AIDS prevention at local 
schools, jails and prisons.

In 1992, Ms. Sweeney was arrested for growing two marijuana plants, which 
she used to alleviate the nausea from her medications, but friends said the 
Marin County district attorney's office had declined to prosecute. On Oct. 
11, 1992, the town of Fairfax passed a resolution supporting the use of 
medical marijuana.

Longtime pal Stephenie Hendricks, an independent television producer, 
recalled an early 1990s episode of "Bay TV," the talk show with TV anchor 
Pete Wilson, where Ms. Sweeney spoke about medical marijuana with former 
U.S. Attorney Joseph Russoniello.

"She reached into her bra and pulled out a joint, lit it and blew smoke in 
their faces, saying, 'If you guys don't mellow out, you're going to get 
heart attacks,' " Hendricks recalled. "I'll never forget the look on Pete's 
face -- it was priceless, and Barbara was giggling with glee."

Pam Lynott of Larkspur, who helped out at Flower Therapy, which served 
about 3,000 people at its peak and operated from 1996 to 1999. Along with 
providing a safe place for people to take their medicine, the clinic hosted 
Sunday potluck dinners and Christmas, Thanksgiving and St. Patrick's Day 
events.

"She was a very dear friend of mine," Lynott said. "She had spunk and a 
heart of gold."

Ms. Sweeney was born May 4, 1953, in Bronx, N.Y. She graduated from Brown 
University in Providence, R.I., with majors in political science and education.

Friends said Ms. Sweeney was diagnosed with HIV in 1989 when she became 
pregnant. She believed she had been infected by her former husband, who 
used intravenous drugs.

Ms. Sweeney moved to Marin County about 20 years ago, most recently living 
in Fairfax.

Visitation hours are tonight from 7 to 8:30 at Mount Tamalpais Cemetery in 
San Rafael, followed by a private memorial service. In lieu of flowers, 
donations are requested for a college fund for Cassie Sweeney at the 
Fairfax branch of the Bank of America, located at 89 Broadway.
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