Pubdate: Sat, 31 Jan 2004
Source: Sacramento Bee (CA)
Copyright: 2004 The Sacramento Bee
Contact:  http://www.sacbee.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/376
Authors: Art Campos, and Jocelyn Wiener
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)

STORE FOR MEDICAL POT OPENS IN ROSEVILLE

A medical marijuana store has quietly opened its doors in Roseville, just 
weeks after a new law took effect permitting qualified patients and 
caregivers to cultivate the plant. Owner Richard Marino and his friends 
held a small christening ceremony Jan. 22 inside the freshly painted, 
sparsely furnished storefront that now houses Capitol Compassionate Care.

"People need a safe environment where they can get their medical marijuana, 
so they don't have to get it on the streets, and they can get quality for a 
reasonable price," Marino said. "Hopefully, this can cut down on street 
trafficking."

But whether the new "cannabis club" will be allowed to remain open may 
depend on which law-enforcement agency is looking at it.

Roseville Police Chief Joel Neves said Marino can operate as long as he 
complies with laws derived from Proposition 215, which was approved by 
voters in 1996 to permit the use of marijuana for medicinal purposes.

"Clearly, the law passed by the voters allows this type of business," Neves 
said. "These businesses exist throughout the state."

But Richard Meyer, a special agent for the U.S. Drug Enforcement 
Administration in San Francisco, indicated the Roseville club could have a 
short run.

"Federal law is clear about marijuana: It is illegal to cultivate, possess 
or distribute it," Meyer said. "So if that club is selling marijuana, it's 
going to be in violation of federal law.

"Just because (the Roseville club) is in operation doesn't mean it's 
legitimate or that we condone it. They should not be surprised if one day 
we show up with a warrant at their door."

Meyer said closing cannabis clubs has been difficult because of staff 
shortages.

"Right now, our number one priority in California is methamphetamines," he 
said.

The Placer County District Attorney's Office declined to comment on 
Marino's business.

Advocates of medical marijuana were pleased that Marino had opened his 
business.

Dale Gieringer, coordinator for the California chapter of the National 
Organization for Reform of Marijuana Laws, said, "That's good news for 
people in the foothills area."

"There are a lot of cannabis facilities in the state, but right now they 
are heavily concentrated in the Bay Area," he said. "I'm sure many people 
will be pleased to drive a shorter distance now."

Sacramento-area users of medicinal marijuana have generally relied on 
underground "delivery services." The services are listed on NORML's Web site.

Marino, a 50-year-old former electrician, said he drove throughout Yolo, 
Sacramento and Placer counties for months before discovering the little 
storefront at 327 Lincoln St. in historic Roseville.

He said he talked to police, the city attorney and the district attorney 
before applying for and receiving a business license.

On Friday, a barely perceptible perfume of marijuana hovered in the air of 
the mostly empty store.

On one wall, prices and varieties of marijuana were listed on a white 
board: Romulan -- $320 an ounce; White Rhino -- $300 an ounce; Acapulco 
Gold -- $275 an ounce; and Placer Gold -- just $200 an ounce.

Marino explained the differences -- some are uplifting, some sedative, some 
grown indoors, some outside. He grows some of the plants himself and buys 
the remainder from friends.

Marijuana has been used for people who have suffered from glaucoma or who 
have undergone chemotherapy or advanced HIV treatment.

Marino just sells pre-measured plastic bags, but said he hopes eventually 
to offer people starter plants and classes on how to grow their own. Public 
reaction to his endeavor has been positive, he said.

"They're happy that I'm here -- that somebody's finally taking a chance," 
he said. "With any business, you just open the door, step out there and see 
if it'll fly. And hopefully, this will fly."

Marino became interested in medicinal marijuana about a decade ago, after a 
series of automobile and workplace accidents -- and corresponding back and 
neck surgeries -- left him in increasingly debilitating pain.

Doctors prescribed strong painkillers and sleeping pills that gave Marino 
severe allergic reactions and left him dazed. Without the pills, his pain 
was shooting, intense, constant and aggravating, he said.

Then a friend recommended Marino try marijuana.

"The short-term memory effect cuts that pain, breaks it into increments so 
you're not dealing with pain constantly," he said.

About two years ago, Marino, a resident of Rancho Cordova, decided he 
wanted to share the abundance of relief he had discovered with others in 
the region.

Senate Bill 420, which went into effect Jan. 1 and calls for identity cards 
for qualified patients and caregivers and also allows them to collectively 
cultivate marijuana, hadn't been proposed yet, but Marino was ready to take 
a chance.

"I started looking for a place to rent," he said. "About 20 places said 
they'd rent, then the next morning would call and say they couldn't rent."

While building owners were often sympathetic, their lawyers and insurers 
were not. Neither, it seemed, were the Realtors who wouldn't return 
Marino's calls.

In the first week his shop has been open -- the hours are 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. 
daily -- clients have been relatively few but, he said, enthusiastic.

"I'd like to open another in Sacramento," he said. "I really think this is 
what's needed."

Marino's store is not the first try at establishing a marijuana 
distribution center in the region under Proposition 215. A cannabis club in 
Citrus Heights was shut down last year by law enforcement officials, and 
the owners of FloraCare were arrested and convicted for conspiracy to sell 
marijuana.

In El Dorado County, a group led by a physician is working with authorities 
to establish a collective garden to grow marijuana for medical purposes.

Sen. John Vasconcellos, D-San Jose, who authored SB 420, which would make 
the garden possible, has taken the position that medical marijuana is not 
addictive.

"We know that all kinds of addictive substances have appropriate medical 
use," said his chief of staff, Sue North.

"Heroin and morphine are used and derivatives of cocaine are used in 
dentistry. We know it can benefit a patient."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom