Pubdate: Fri, 20 Jun 2003
Source: News Banner, The (LA)
Contact:  2003 Covington News Banner.
Website: http://www.newsbanner.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1848
Author: Debra Saunders
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Ed+Rosenthal (Rosenthal, Ed)

CONVICTIONS VERSUS CONVICTION

Shame on U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer for sentencing 
medical-marijuana maven Ed Rosenthal to one day behind bars - time already 
served - followed by three years' probation. In doing so, Breyer sent the 
dangerous signal that if you don't like a law, you don't have to obey it.

Readers of this column are aware that I believe medical marijuana should be 
legal. Truth be told, I think marijuana should be decriminalized. But 
there's something wrong when a federal judge allows a convicted criminal to 
basically get off because he disagrees with the federal law.

Some background: In 2002, the feds arrested Rosenthal for growing marijuana 
for the Harm Reduction Center in San Francisco. During the trial, Breyer 
stymied defense attempts to bring up Proposition 215, the voter-approved 
state medical marijuana initiative, as well as the fact that Oakland 
officials may have deputized Rosenthal to carry out the city's medical 
marijuana program.

When jurors learned of Rosenthal's "Deputy Ed" status after they convicted 
him, they were furious. As Rosenthal told me before his "sentencing," 
Breyer had kept jurors from learning "the whole facts."

But Breyer was right to try to prevent "jury nullification" - that is, 
jurors ruling "not guilty" because they don't like the law.

Too bad the good judge then decided that, rather than sentence Rosenthal to 
21 months as the court probation office recommended, he could jiggle the 
facts so that he could do what he wouldn't let a jury do.

Defense attorney Dennis Riordan faulted news reports for characterizing the 
case as a battle between federal and state authority. Au contraire, Riordan 
told the court, the defense was based on a "highly sophisticated argument" 
(if he did say so himself) that Oakland created an "immunity exception" 
when it deputized Rosenthal.

Breyer disagreed - but then told the courtroom that Rosenthal, "as a member 
of the general public," couldn't be expected to know that the deputization 
had no force under federal law.

Bunk. Rosenthal is not a "member of the general public." He's an informed 
activist. He used to write the "Ask Ed" column for "High Times" and 
"Cannabis Culture." He calls himself the "Guru of Ganja."

He knew better.

Call me old-fashioned, but I remember when those who engaged in civil 
disobedience expected to be punished and accepted it. Now they break the 
law, and their attorneys argue that their clients are so principled, they 
shouldn't have to go to jail.

And I have to agree with Assistant U.S. Attorney George Bevan, who argued 
that when activists win lighter sentences, it leads to "disparate sentencing."

"Disparate sentencing" is the antithesis of "equal justice."

I'm happy for Rosenthal and his family. I saw the relief on his face 
Wednesday morning.

Still, there is a price to pay when activists feel free to break laws they 
don't like. Consider Eric Rudolph, the Olympic bombing suspect and abortion 
foe who pleaded not guilty to bombing an abortion clinic in 1998. Yes, I 
know, Rudolph is accused of killing two and wounding others, while 
Rosenthal grew pot.

But Rudolph's supporters share with Rosenthal's backers a deep hostility 
for federal law enforcement and a belief that their guy shouldn't have to 
go to jail because his convictions justify what he did.

In this country, the courts are supposed to punish people - or not punish 
people - for what they do, not for what they think.

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Debra J. Saunders is a nationally syndicated columnist.
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MAP posted-by: Jackl