Pubdate: Tue, 24 Feb 2009
Source: Tribune, The (San Luis Obispo, CA)
Copyright: 2009 The Tribune
Contact:  http://www.sanluisobispo.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/391
Author: Leslie Parrilla
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Charles+Lynch
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal)

ARROYO GRANDE MEDICAL MARIJUANA DISPENSER HEADS LOS ANGELES PROTEST

LOS ANGELES -- The Arroyo Grande man in the middle of a protest of 
the federal government's prosecution of medical marijuana purveyors 
stood center stage Monday at a rally in downtown Los Angeles.

Charles Lynch, who ran the Morro Bay medical marijuana dispensary 
called Central Coast Compassionate Caregivers, wore a crown of 
imitation marijuana in crucifixion-like style and an orange prison 
jumpsuit reading "Gotbusted Penitentiary." He chanted in unison with 
a fiery crowd of about 60 supporters from throughout the state 
clustered on a corner outside the federal courthouse.

Lynch was expected to be sentenced Monday at the courthouse, but the 
hearing was postponed until March 23.

He was convicted Aug. 5 of operating the dispensary and faces from 
five to 100 years in prison, he said.  Federal prosecutors charged 
Lynch with distributing marijuana to minors, maintaining a 
drug-involved premises and aiding and abetting. He was out of jail 
Monday on $400,000 bond.

Horns blared from a bustle of traffic rounding the corner at Temple 
and North Main streets as Lynch's public defenders castigated the 
federal government for its prosecution of their client.

The case pits conflicting state and federal laws against each other 
- -- voter-approved state law allows medical marijuana, yet a federal 
law restricts the drug.

"The question now is whether or not Charlie is going to be crucified 
before history changes," said public defender Reuven Cohen, one of 
Lynch's attorneys.

Protesters called on President Barack Obama to require the federal 
Drug Enforcement Administration to acknowledge state law.

"I'm really hoping that some of this gets out to Obama," said Zita 
Worley, 38, of Beaumont, a member of Americans For Safe Access, an 
organization that promotes legal access to cannabis for therapeutic 
use and research.

Worley wants Obama to fill the top DEA slot with someone who will 
stop the raids on medical marijuana dispensaries.

Federal and state authorities raided the Morro Bay co-operative March 
29, 2007. Abe Baxter, a security officer there, was also arrested for 
allegedly selling the drug outside the dispensary, according to a 
crime report. Baxter is being tried locally by state officials and is 
scheduled to be in court March 3 for a pretrial hearing, according to 
court records.

Lynch's mother, Bodine Jones, came from New Mexico to garner support 
for her son. She rallied the crowd by telling supporters Monday that, 
"I'm not going to lose a child to the federal government."

Rep. Lois Capps, D-Santa Barbara, released a statement Monday urging 
federal authorities to suspend enforcement actions against 
law-abiding medical marijuana dispensaries in California.

A mention of Sheriff Pat Hedges, who did not attend the rally but 
whose department was involved in investigating Lynch's dispensary, 
received a prolonged "Boo" from the group that pumped fluorescent 
green signs reading "Free Lynch" and a misspelled "Marijana Cures Epilepsy."

Sheriff's officials have defended their investigation, saying that 
they were looking into state and federal violations that posed a 
danger to the public and left them in the middle of conflicting laws. 
They assert that their job is not to ignore violations on any level, 
if they learn a law has been broken.

The peaceful protest Monday remained low-key, prompting even a wave 
from a Los Angeles Police Department officer driving by. Several 
officers stood nearby the crowd throughout the rally as one organizer 
advised people not to medicate while there.

Gary Gall of Cambria said he was driving through the area and decided 
to stop and support Lynch. His wife was suffering from cancer and 
used medical marijuana instead of a cocktail of drugs that did 
nothing to help her, he said.

"I hope the president will stand by his word and not throw people in 
jail in states that have voted for it," said Gall, referring to 
legalizing the drug for medical use.

Lynch also called on the president to "Make a change today" and 
encouraged supporters to "Let your voice be heard. Let your e-mails be sent."

When asked if he would open a dispensary again, Lynch said, "I don't 
know if I could say, knowing what I know now, that I would do it again." 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake