Pubdate: Fri, 04 Apr 2008
Source: Honolulu Advertiser (HI)
Copyright: 2008 The Honolulu Advertiser, a division of Gannett Co. Inc.
Contact:  http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/195
Author: Kevin Dayton
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)

COUNSELOR ARRESTED IN MARIJUANA PROBE

HILO, Hawai'i - A Big Island social worker who links  clients seeking 
medical marijuana with doctors who will  certify the patients for 
legal medical cannabis use has  been arrested in connection with a 
marijuana case in  Puna.

Matthew Brittain, 46, owns a company called Effective  Change LLC, 
and has a private practice in Hilo that  provides mental health 
services including family and  marriage counseling, anger management 
and substance  abuse treatment, according to the Effective Change Web site.

Police arrested Brittain Monday after a search of his  Fern Acres 
property over the weekend turned up 64  marijuana plants -- some up 
to 6 feet tall -- allegedly  growing outdoors to the rear of 
Brittain's house and a  rental unit on the property.

Big Island police said they found another 31 plants in  an indoor 
grow room in a rental unit on the property,  and also seized nearly 
five pounds of dried marijuana  and nearly an ounce of hashish oil.

Brittain said he was growing marijuana legally on his  property under 
the terms of medical marijuana permits,  but said he was unaware that 
a tenant in the rental  unit was growing additional plants in the 
grow room and  in patches to the rear of the homes that exceeded 
the  legal limits.

"I would just like to emphasize the fact that I was not  charged, and 
I was operating in a complete legal  fashion to benefit the 
unfortunate patients who need  their medicine and are unable to grow 
it for  themselves," Brittain said.

The state medical marijuana law allows a permit holder  to grow up to 
seven marijuana plants and have three  ounces of dried marijuana.

East Hawai'i Vice Section Lt. Samuel Jelsma said police  are still 
gathering information, and will submit the  completed investigation 
to county prosecutors to decide  whether Brittain should be charged.

For the past several years Brittain has been linking  people seeking 
medical marijuana with doctors on the  Big Island and in Reno, Nev. 
He has worked with three  doctors, and Brittain estimated he has 
helped about 700  patients get their "blue cards," or medical 
marijuana  permits.

A Web site advertising Brittain's services lists his  fees for 
combined case management and medical marijuana  certification at 
about $300 in Hawai'i, and about $500  in Nevada, although Brittain 
said he now charges more  modest fees in Hawai'i on a sliding scale 
ranging from  $175 to $250.

Brittain said he does not believe police targeted him  for his work 
with medical marijuana patients. "In fact,  the police have been very 
considerate and kind toward  me, and I think they've been operating 
with great  professionalism," he said.

Police said they were drawn to the Fern Acres home by a  911 call 
last Friday reporting that a man at the home  had shot his wife.

When police checked the property they did not find a  gunshot victim, 
but did find the marijuana and hashish  oil. Officers served a search 
warrant the following day  and seized the plants, hashish and other items.

Police charged tenant Christopher Holt with two counts  of commercial 
promotion of marijuana, two counts of  promoting a detrimental drug, 
one count of promoting a  harmful drug and five counts of possessing 
drug  paraphernalia.

Police learned Holt's wife was unharmed, and did not  find any 
evidence that shots had been fired at the Fern  Acres property.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom