Pubdate: Thu, 1 Apr 2010
Source: California Lawyer (CA)
Copyright: 2010 Daily Journal Corporation
Contact:  http://www.callawyer.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1658
Author: Michael Estrin
Note: Michael Estrin is a freelance writer living in Los Angeles.
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?253 (Cannabis - Medicinal - U.S.)

HIGH TIMES IN L.A.

In the Pot-Consumption Capital of California, Marijuana Defense 
Lawyers Thrive on the Haziness of the Law.

In a Van Nuys parking lot one afternoon last November, Allison 
Margolin spoke to me about her drug defense work while sharing a 
joint with one of her clients-a lanky, somewhat disheveled-looking 
young man named Seamus Ethridge. The conversation struck me as a bit 
odd, actually.

It also seemed to me that Margolin was taking a needless risk. After 
all, she knew that I was a reporter working on a story for this magazine.

Moreover, in a nearby courthouse she had just argued passionately on 
behalf of Ethridge, who stood accused of breaking the state's drug 
laws. Still, if Margolin felt any discomfort at all about lighting up 
in my presence, I failed to detect it.

"I don't know where the DA gets off bringing this fucking case," she 
had said to me earlier in the day as she marched toward the 
courthouse. "The law is on our side!"

Margolin, a Harvard Law School graduate, is the daughter of Bruce 
Margolin, the criminal defense lawyer who literally wrote the book on 
marijuana law (The Margolin Guide). Now, at the age of 32, she is a 
well-known advocate in her own right.

And like so many of her clients, she herself uses marijuana with a 
doctor's approval.

In her case, it's for anxiety. "Marijuana helps me focus in a 
productive way without obsessing," she says, hastening to add that 
she would never consume it before a court appearance.

Clad in bohemian chic-dark, tight jeans, a vintage sweater, and a 
frilly red scarf-the diminutive Margolin has an in-your-face style 
that suits her twentysomething-year-old client just fine. "Allison is 
pretty well known among [pro-marijuana] activists," Ethridge tells 
me. "She's great because she doesn't take any shit; she fights hard 
and she believes in this."

Margolin also can be counted on not to give any grief to a 
marijuana-growing client who shows up in court wearing neon green 
trousers and a T-shirt that proclaims, in a pot-leaf pattern, "I Am 
Not a Criminal."

"Love the shirt," Margolin beamed when she met up with Ethridge at 
the courthouse's first-floor elevator bank.

Six months earlier, Ethridge had been staying at a Motel 6 in Canoga 
Park when, at about 10 p.m., two police officers knocked on his room 
door. They were from the Valley Bureau Motel Detail, which routinely 
checks motel registries for persons with outstanding warrants.

In Ethridge's case, they had determined that he had an outstanding 
narcotics warrant in San Luis Obispo. They also determined at the 
time of his arrest that he had a large quantity of marijuana on him, 
as well as about $5,000 in cash.

"I showed them my patient ID," Ethridge remembers, "and explained I 
had grown marijuana for various collectives that I belong to. The 
cops didn't know much about medical marijuana laws, so they arrested 
me, which is common.

When the cops are in doubt, they usually make an arrest."

This arrest-first mentality infuriates Margolin. Yet, in making the 
case that the charges against Ethridge should be dropped, she didn't 
even bother denying that he was a full-time marijuana cultivator. 
Instead, she simply argued that everything he did was perfectly legal.

Of course, whether or not her approach would work depended heavily on 
how the judge interpreted California's fuzzy medical marijuana 
statutes-starting with Proposition 215, also known as the 
Compassionate Use Act, which voters approved in 1996 (Cal. Health & 
Safety Code 11362.5). Under that law, sick people-in theory the 
gravely ill, but in practice anyone who can secure a doctor's signed 
approval-are exempted from criminal liability for cultivating, 
possessing, or using marijuana.

Then, seven years later, the state legislature passed the Medical 
Marijuana Program Act to clarify how patients can cultivate and 
distribute medical marijuana (Cal. Health & Safety Code 
11362.711362.9). Together, these two laws gave birth to an industry 
worth an estimated $14 billion that today serves as many as 400,000 
Californians. But the laws provided little guidance for 
distinguishing legal sales from illegal ones. And this has put the 
courts in an awkward bind.

Did Ethridge have a right to grow, distribute, and consume marijuana? 
Sure he did. But if in the course of doing so he exchanged money with 
anyone-well, then, all bets were off.

In fact, when Ethridge walked into the courtroom that day wearing his 
green and white T-shirt, he faced the grim prospect of spending the 
next couple years in prison.

And yet, just before he took his seat, I saw him break into a big 
grin. This was after the uniformed bailiff had made eye contact with 
him and then, with two fingers pressed to his lips, began to 
playfully inhale an imaginary joint.

Was it a show of support, or a show of scorn?

I couldn't be sure.

As recently as February, Los Angeles was said to have more marijuana 
dispensaries than Starbucks coffee shops (Harper's Magazine put the 
ratio at four to one). But exact numbers are hard to come by; 
estimates range anywhere from 300 to 1,000. The higher end reflects 
the number of applications on file with the city; the lower suggests 
how many have actually opened.

By my own count I found close to a dozen within just a few miles of 
the Van Nuys courthouse.

Don Duncan, California director of Americans for Safe Access, told 
the Wall Street Journal last fall that he believes the "vast 
majority" of the city's medical marijuana dispensaries are "trying to 
operate legally." But Bill Panzer, a criminal defense lawyer and 
marijuana legalization advocate who helped draft Prop. 215, 
acknowledges that "the vast, overwhelming majority" of outlets are 
not legal because they are not collectives or cooperatives. "If 
somebody owns the store, sells marijuana, and at end of day takes the 
extra money and puts it in his pocket and goes home," he told Fortune 
magazine in September, "that's not a collective."

To get a better feel for what was going on, I decided to drop in on a 
few of the dispensaries myself.

First off, I would need a doctor's recommendation. (Recommendation is 
the term of art here, since under federal law marijuana is still 
classified as a Schedule 1 narcotic, and therefore can't actually be 
prescribed by anyone.) The process couldn't have been easier.

A Google search led me to a directory of "marijuana-friendly 
doctors." Choosing one near my apartment, I made an appointment for 
the following day. The doctor's office was in a run-down strip mall 
(other tenants included a massage parlor, a Laundromat, and a liquor 
store). It had a large plasma TV in the waiting room and a black 
leather couch in the exam room, where I sat while the doctor made his 
assessment. I told him that I grind my teeth (which is true) and that 
my dentist had prescribed a mouth guard, but offered only Advil for 
the headaches.

The doctor nodded, and asked if the Advil worked and if I had asked 
my dentist about medical marijuana. (No and yes were my answers.) He 
then agreed to make the recommendation, and indicated that I had 30 
days to send his office verification of my claim; a bill for the 
mouth guard would suffice. He also warned me not to operate heavy 
machinery while under the drug's influence.

The process took all of five minutes and involved no physical exam. 
After paying $100 in cash, I emerged with a signed recommendation and 
a laminated card that resembles a driver's license.

It wasn't necessary to wait for my dentist to send over the 
paperwork: The recommendation gave me immediate access to every 
dispensary in the state.

I selected one called Herbal 420 Caregivers, just two blocks away 
from the Van Nuys courthouse. It had tinted windows and a green neon 
sign. After presenting my card to a rough-looking security guard, I 
walked through a double set of doors into a small, unheated room with 
a concrete floor.

A glass counter held about 30 jars of marijuana.

One jar was labeled "Juicy Fruit," another "Green Crack," and still 
another "AK-47." On a display shelf below the pot sat an assortment 
of bongs and pipes.

Scarface movie posters-modified with cannabis-leaf decorations-hung 
on one wall.

When I asked the clerk what strain would work best for a headache, 
she shrugged.

Then she told me the shop was running a special on Sour Diesel. If I 
purchased an eighth of an ounce, she explained, I would get an extra 
gram free, and because I was a new customer, they'd throw in a joint 
and a lighter as well. I asked what marijuana-laced edibles she had 
in stock. "If you buy three brownies," she offered, "I can give you a 
price break." "What's the dosage?" I asked. "Do you eat the whole 
brownie?" Again, she shrugged.

When I told her I would take an eighth of an ounce of Blackberry 
Kush, she put the marijuana in a brown pill bottle and sealed it with 
a child-safe cap. Nice touch, I thought.

Even so, I left the premises feeling like I had just visited a drug dealer.

I got no such feeling weeks later, however, when I dropped by the 
Cornerstone Research Collective. Located in the middle of a 
commercial strip, the three-year-old dispensary is about 15 miles 
east of Herbal 420 Caregivers. Here the man behind the counter is 
Michael Backes. He is a bald, scholarly looking man in his mid 50s 
who studied biology at Indiana University. "There are a lot of really 
smart people in the medical marijuana business," he told me. "And 
there are a lot of knuckleheads too."

Compared to the first dispensary I went to, the Cornerstone was 
harder to find: For starters it didn't have lighted pot leaves in the 
window or neon signs.

Also, its security guard was not quite as scary looking, dressed in 
khakis and a button-down shirt.

At the Cornerstone, patients coming through the door are shown to a 
modest waiting room where they can look at the menu. The menu doesn't 
change much from month to month, Backes says, because the collective 
always purchases marijuana from the same growers.

Once patients are confirmed-a staff member verifies both the 
patient's recommendation and the standing of the doctor-they are 
brought into a side room that looks a lot like a medical lab. Glass 
jars of organic marijuana are displayed on a metal table during 
business hours and stored in a refrigerator at night.

The dispensary generally limits patients to an eighth of an ounce 
each visit, although exceptions are made for long-distance customers 
who can't come in as often.

I asked Backes how he maintains the quality of his inventory. "You 
talk to your growers," he explained. "You visit them, they bring in 
plants during the growing process, so you really know who's conscious 
of the fact that they're producing medicine, and who's out to make a 
quick buck."

Of course, even at the Cornerstone money changes hands.

The collective pays growers a flat fee for their costs, and an 
additional amount based on their expertise.

But Backes stressed that no one in his network is getting rich from 
this line of work. "If you're doing it right-operating in a closed 
circuit as defined by the attorney general's guidelines-you're not 
making a profit," he said. "The problem is that we've come to a place 
where the illicit market has become somewhat legitimized, and it has 
run into the medicinal community, which is still in its infancy."

Meanwhile, it's up to the local jurisdictions to figure out how they 
can legally regulate distributors. These can be co-ops (defined under 
the attorney general's guidelines as democratically controlled 
entities "organized and registered ... under the Corporations or Food 
and Agriculture Code"); collectives (less formal, nonstatutory 
entities); or dispensaries (storefront outlets, which have been 
operating in California for many years but are not explicitly 
recognized under state law). In San Diego, the district attorney 
tried unsuccessfully in 2008 to persuade an appeals court to strike 
down the state's medical marijuana laws, arguing that they conflict 
with, and are preempted by, the federal Controlled Substances Act 
(County of San Diego v. San Diego NORML, 165 Cal. App. 4th 798 
(2008)). The DA's office suffered another high-profile setback last 
December after police raided 14 local dispensaries and arrested 31 
people. The first defendant to be tried-a Navy veteran who ran a 
collective called Answerdam Alternative Care-was acquitted of all 
drug-related charges.

Apparently, the jury felt that the law was just too vague to support 
a conviction.

Elsewhere in California, at least 120 cities and eight counties have 
passed bans on "pot shops," according to Americans for Safe Access. 
These bans, often rooted in nuisance law, are typically justified as 
falling within a community's traditional power to protect the health, 
safety, and welfare of its citizens.

Recently a court of appeal upheld one city's efforts to regulate 
zoning for pot dispensaries (City of Claremont v. Kruse, 177 Cal. 
App. 4th 1153 (2009)). But the litigation over such ordinances 
appears to be far from over: At this writing the state's Fourth 
District court of appeal was considering whether to overturn a ban 
that the city of Anaheim enacted in 2007 (Qualified Patients 
Association v. City of Anaheim, No. G040077 (4th Dist., Div. 3)). The 
case has attracted substantial briefing from friends of the court.

"There's a lot of confusion out there about zoning collectives and 
dispensaries," says Chrystal James, a lawyer in Pasadena who has 
advised small towns throughout Southern California on marijuana law. 
"And so there's going to be continued litigation going forward no 
matter what happens, because there has been such a divergence of 
experience throughout the state," he says.

The divergence is particularly striking between Northern and Southern 
California. Consider Oakland: There, last year's ballot measure to 
increase by a factor of 15 the gross-receipts tax at the city's four 
dispensaries drew 80 percent of the vote and the enthusiastic support 
of marijuana activists, who saw it as a big step toward legalization. 
In Silicon Valley, "local governments have been very reasonable and 
cooperative," reports Matt Lucero, an attorney who left corporate 
work last year to launch Santa Clara County's first medical marijuana 
collective. "We don't have any outspoken diehards crusading against 
medical marijuana like they do down south."

Yet even in the Southland, some communities have come to a meeting of 
the minds.

Take the city of West Holly-wood. The 1.9-square-mile, ultra-liberal 
enclave struck a delicate compromise between neighborhood groups that 
wanted to cap the number of pot shops, and medical marijuana 
advocates who demanded storefronts in safe, accessible locations.

After a brief moratorium on new dispensaries in 2005, city leaders 
worked out a straightforward set of rules that restrict the number of 
shops to seven, limit business hours, require security measures, and 
prohibit consumption of marijuana on the premises. As the Los Angeles 
Times reported in November, "When the West Hollywood City Council 
updated its ordinance ... the vote was unanimous, no residents spoke 
in opposition and the city's dispensary operators lined up in support."

Compared with Allison Margolin, Los Angeles Deputy District Attorney 
Stacey Solomons comes across as a low-key legal advocate. (Solomons 
declined to be interviewed for this article.) For Ethridge's November 
court hearing, she dressed conservatively in dark slacks and a muted 
red blazer, and for the most part spoke in a slow, methodical manner. 
Nevertheless, when she began to question the defendant about his back 
and shoulder problems-the conditions Ethridge says he treats by 
smoking marijuana-she could barely contain her annoyance.

"Well, if you're in so much pain," she asked, "are you high right now?"

"Do you mean, am I medicated?" Ethridge responded.

"Whatever. Are you medicated?."

"I medicated several hours ago," Ethridge acknowledged.

This exchange was entertaining enough to listen to. But it hardly 
seemed to advance the prosecutor's case, since Ethridge never claimed 
that the 72 marijuana-laced chocolate bars and the pound or so of 
bagged weed that police found in his motel room was entirely meant 
for his personal consumption.

On the other hand, when Margolin argued that Ethridge, in his role as 
a pot provider, enjoyed all of the legal protections of a qualified 
primary caregiver, a more substantive discussion ensued. "[The 
California Health and Safety code] allows for a primary caregiver to 
receive reasonable compensation for services related to helping a 
patient obtain medicine," Margolin told the court.

Because Ethridge had been issued a caregiver card, she concluded, he 
could not be prosecuted.

Margolin's argument had a simple elegance to it. Unfortunately for 
her, though, an appeals court had previously ruled that the mere 
provision of marijuana does not confer caregiver status to the 
provider (People ex rel. Lungren v. Peron, 59 Cal. App. 4th 1383, 
13951398 (1997)). And when, under Solomons's questioning, Ethridge 
couldn't come up with the last names and addresses of a few of his 
Santa Barbara patients, the prosecutor chortled. "A caregiver should 
at least know the last names of his patients," she said.

This left Margolin with her last, best option: to attack the 
prosecutor's case by raising two related questions.

First, what constitutes an illegal marijuana sale? And second, what 
constitutes an illegal profit? "Sales [of medical marijuana] are not 
illegal," Margolin declared, waving her arms as if to embrace every 
one of the city's several hundred dispensaries. "They happen all the 
time, all over the city and the state." And only through sales, she 
argued, is medical marijuana available to most of the people who need it.

By Ethridge's own account, it costs about $41,000 to run his 
operation for the three months it takes to get a harvest.

That includes rent for the grow-house, supplies, water, and power. 
(Electricity alone, he says, can cost him as much as $4,000 a month.) 
But the figure that Solomons wanted to focus on was the $35 an hour 
Ethridge paid himself to cultivate and transport his product.

"Thirty-five dollars for trimming a few weeds a couple times a 
month," Solomons scoffed, after Ethridge took ten minutes to explain 
his expenses in detail. "The defendant is making a ton of money, and 
it seems clear that he is exploiting the law and making a very big 
profit." Solomons then cited People v. Mentch (45 Cal. 4th 274 
(2008)), a recent state Supreme Court decision that California 
prosecutors are fond of using to argue that marijuana sales are 
inherently illegal.

Margolin, in turn, accused Solomons of cherry-picking the case law. 
Mentch, she noted, referred to primary caregivers and made no mention 
of sales or collectives. She then cited two other rulings, which held 
that collectives and cooperatives may sell medicine to their members 
(People v. Urziceanu, 132 Cal. App. 4th 747 (2005); and People v. 
Hochanadel, 176 Cal. App. 4th 997 (2009)). "It's as if," Margolin 
bristled, "the DA's office simply wants to ignore the rules laid out 
in Urziceanu and Hochanadel and take from Mentch what simply isn't there."

 From the outset of the hearing, the judge presiding over the case-a 
silver-haired, no-nonsense jurist named Leland B. Harris-made little 
effort in either tone or facial expressions to mask his doubts about 
the wisdom of the state's medical marijuana laws. Nor did he seem 
particularly impressed by Margolin's arguments.

At one point Judge Harris asked why didn't Ethridge simply pay 
himself a minimum wage. Ethridge answered that he based his 
compensation on what he had previously earned as a construction worker.

Harris acknowledged that the legal question raised here wasn't an 
easy one. "It seems like an arbitrary head-scratcher," he said. Then, 
after a long pause, he added, "Intuitively, I believe that the 
defendant is making a profit.

However, legally I don't feel as though I can honestly reach that 
conclusion. ... Case dismissed."

Throwing up his arms in triumph, Ethridge reached over to give his 
lawyer an emotional hug. It was over. Or so he thought.

But Margolin knew better.

And a few moments later she approached the prosecutor to ask her if 
she intended to refile charges.

"It's not my call," Solomons responded, but then allowed that the 
chances were pretty high.

"Are you really going to do that?" Margolin snarled. "How do you 
sleep at night?

I just want to know. Is this fun for you?"

"It's not personal, Allison," Solomons shrugged. "And you could be a 
lot nicer in court."

Less than a week later, on the morning of November 16, the Los 
Angeles City Council considered making a fifth attempt to cap the 
number of medical marijuana dispensaries in the city. The meeting 
drew hundreds of activists, including at least a dozen seriously ill 
people who insisted that the only way they could get their medicine 
was through the storefronts. Others berated the council for failing 
to seek outside legal opinions on the matter, and promised to mount a 
vigorous court challenge to any zoning ordinance that closed 
dispensaries or relegated them to high-crime industrial areas.

And still others-about a dozen, actually-braved jeers from the crowd 
to urge the city council to pass a zoning ordinance-even a flawed 
one, if necessary. "You've had long enough-do something!" one man shouted.

His frustration was easy enough to understand. In 2005, two years 
after the Legislature passed the Medical Marijuana Program Act, only 
four dispensaries operated openly in Los Angeles. A year later there 
were 98, according to a report by the LAPD's then-Chief William 
Bratton. He warned that without an updated zoning ordinance in place, 
criminal elements would exploit the vagueness of the law and set up 
shop near schools and residential areas.

The city council responded in 2007 by passing a moratorium on new pot shops.

But that measure did little to check the rapid spread of outlets, 
since it contained a loophole allowing dispensaries to apply for a 
hardship exception. Then, shortly after the council got around to 
closing that loophole, a judge declared the entire moratorium 
unconstitutional (Los Angeles Collective Assoc. v. City of Los 
Angeles, No. BC422215 (Los Angeles Super. Ct. preliminary injunction 
issued Oct. 19, 2009)).

So after all that, what would or could the city do to put the genie 
back in the bottle?

The answer came in January, when the council finally passed a 
resolution to cap the number of marijuana dispensaries in Los Angeles 
at 70, while leaving unaffected those that had registered with the 
city before November 2007.

The same measure also forbade dispensaries to operate within 1,000 
feet of "sensitive use" areas such as schools, parks, libraries, and 
other dispensaries.

The vote drew cautious praise from law enforcement officials, the Los 
Angeles Times, and even a few defense lawyers.

But one aspect of the new ordinance that could spell trouble for 
prosecutors is its requirement that dispensaries pay their employees 
"reasonable wages and benefits." How could a dispensary afford to pay 
its workers anything and not run afoul of the district attorney's 
position that all marijuana sales are illegal?

An answer was not forthcoming.

Los Angeles defense lawyer Michael Chernis advises doctors and a 
dozen collectives on how to operate within the state's medical 
marijuana laws. "The city council gets credit for not trying to ban 
dispensaries in the entirety or bowing to pressure from the DA and 
city attorney to ban sales," he says. "However, this [new ordinance] 
reflects a compromise position on many issues, the net result of 
which will likely be more litigation and patients getting hurt."

Margolin concurs. "The Medical Marijuana Program is about providing 
access. Limiting the number of dispensaries, forcing patients to 
drive greater distances for their medicine-that doesn't help patients 
at all," she says. Moreover, she argues, capping the number of pot 
shops would only benefit the illicit drug market: "These places are 
supposed to be nonprofit, but if you limit sales to only a few shops 
you're going to have crazy amounts of cash running through just a few 
places. How does that make any sense?"

Meanwhile, the wheels of justice continue to grind.

On February 22, the Los Angeles district attorney filed 24 felony 
charges-including selling, transporting and possessing 
marijuana-against Jeff Joseph, operator of a popular dispensary in 
Venice. (Joseph's lawyer, Eric Shevin, pushed back in the press, 
mostly agreeing to the facts of the case but differing over the 
interpretation of the law.) Those charges came on the heels of a 
February 18 civil action by the city attorney's office against 21 
dispensaries, attempting to shut them down. The filings followed a 
preliminary injunction issued by a trial court against Eagle Rock's 
Hemp Factory V dispensary which, prosecutors say, supports the theory 
that state law forbids sales.

Before I began work on this article, I assumed that in spite of all 
the controversy surrounding marijuana, Californians had come a long 
way from the days when the drug was associated with crime and deviant 
sexual behavior.

But a close reading of history suggests that, by and large, we've 
merely come full circle.

Back in 1937, the year after the infamous anti-marijuana film Reefer 
Madness came out, pot was still perfectly legal-yet was considered 
dangerous enough that Congress passed a stiff excise tax on doctors, 
pharmacists, and farmers who promoted its use. (In the early 20th 
century, drug companies as large as Eli Lilly sold cannabis in 
powdered form as a painkiller, a sedative, and an "exhilarant.") 
During World War II cannabis even enjoyed a brief period of 
respectability when the U.S. government-in need of rope and textiles 
for the armed forces-encouraged farmers to grow "Hemp for Victory." 
And in 1944, New York Mayor Fiorello La Guardia commissioned a study 
that ended up debunking many of the fanciful claims made against pot. 
By the 1950s, however, marijuana was once again being demonized by 
federal lawmakers: In 1951 Congress passed the Boggs Act (26 
U.S.C.  2557), and in 1956 came the Narcotic Control Act (70 Stat. 
567), which imposed minimum sentences of two to ten years, plus a 
fine of up to $20,000 for anyone caught using marijuana outside the 
purview of the 1937 Marijuana Tax Act. Finally, in 1970 Congress 
passed the Controlled Substance Act (21 U.S.C.  801971), which 
effectively criminalized all uses.

Today, however, in the face of the most serious economic crisis since 
the Great Depression, legalizing marijuana has once again become a 
topic of serious discussion, if only as a way to generate much-needed 
sales-tax revenue.

In Mendocino County alone, where cultivation is said to account for 
nearly two-thirds of the local economy, pot is a $1 billion-a-year 
crop. Moreover, BusinessWeek magazine recently reported that 
Oakland's Harborside Health Center, the nation's largest collective, 
has $20 million in annual sales, with a payroll of 75 full-time 
employees. (Oakland is also home to Oaksterdam University, where 
aspiring cultivators can enroll in semester-long courses at its 
30,000-square-foot facility.) And according to Harvard economist 
Jeffrey Miron, if marijuana were suddenly to be legalized across the 
country, it would generate $7 billion in tax revenue and save about 
$13.5 billion in prohibition costs.

So it wasn't altogether shocking when, in the midst of this state's 
multibillion-dollar budget-deficit crisis, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger 
called for a debate on legalization. Nor was it surprising that, in 
December, the promoters of an initiative to make marijuana legal 
easily collected more than the number of signatures required to get 
the measure onto the November ballot.

When I visited Allison Margolin's bustling Beverly Hills law office 
several weeks after she got the first set of charges against Ethridge 
dismissed, she told me, "I'd love it if I didn't have any more marijuana cases.

Legalization would hurt my business, but I'd be thrilled."

Maybe so. But for the present, Margolin's marijuana defense practice 
appears to be booming.

In fact, the client she saw just before I arrived was a man whose son 
had recently been arrested for possession with intent to distribute. 
To Margolin, it was just another routine consultation-except that in 
this case the father of the potential client was a cop.

On January 27, after a second hearing in front of a second judge, the 
case against Seamus Ethridge quietly died. At last report Ethridge 
was back in Santa Barbara, where he recently expanded his collective 
and is accepting new patients.

In a rare moment of restraint, though, Margolin declined to provide 
any further details.
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake