Pubdate: Thu, 24 Jun 2010
Source: San Gabriel Valley Tribune (CA)
Copyright: 2010 San Gabriel Valley Tribune
Contact: http://www.sgvtribune.com/writealetter
Website: http://www.sgvtribune.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3725
Author: Wes Woods II
Note: The Associated Press contributed to this story.

MOBILE MARIJUANA OPERATION SIDELINED

CLAREMONT - Until recently, Ronald Chavez would drive  his vehicle to
homes and apartments in the Inland  Valley and drop off orders of marijuana.

The owner of Claremont-based Tasty Licks would make  deliveries to
anyone with a valid medical marijuana  identification card.

But the operations of the mobile medical marijuana  company were
curtailed earlier this month when the Los  Angeles County District
Attorney's Office announced it  would prosecute anyone who performed
such a delivery  service.

"I stopped delivering because I heard things about  that, actually,"
said Chavez, a Pomona resident.

District Attorney Steve Cooley said delivery of medical  marijuana and
selling the drug online are illegal.  Cooley said those who do so
could face felony charges.

The statement released June7 by Cooley, who is running  for state
attorney general, was in response to claims  that medical marijuana
providers in Los Angeles had  found a loophole by making house calls
to those seeking  pot.

Chavez said he was advised by his attorneys to revamp  the
business.

"So I'll be on hold for a little while," he said. "I  have to make
sure everything's good to go."

Tasty Licks could be back as soon as early July, Chavez
said.

The company was about to make a profit prior to its  shutdown thanks
in part to a solid reputation among  customers who praised its
delivery speed and quality of  marijuana, Chavez claims.

The customers  would call Tasty Licks and either put in an order for
medical marijuana or ask to view samples at their  homes.

Deliveries were typically made for free after 10 p.m.  in Los Angeles
and Orange counties, as long as the  customer was a member of the
nonprofit and had a  reservation.

"We provide the highest quality indica, sativa and  hybrid medical
strains," boasted the company's Web  site, www.tasty licks.org.

Chavez said he printed business cards and paid for  advertisements in
magazines.

Tasty Licks had fewer than 100 customers, and they ran  the gamut from
young adults to seniors, Chavez said.

Chavez said business really started to take off in  October when U.S.
Attorney General Eric Holder said  pot-smoking patients or their
sanctioned suppliers  should not be targeted for federal prosecution
in  states that allow medical marijuana. The Justice  Department
statement said federal prosecutors are being  told it is not a good
use of their time to arrest  people who use or provide medical
marijuana in strict  compliance with state law.

Chavez now directs his customers to magazines that  advertise mobile
medical marijuana companies.

There have been numerous mobile medical marijuana  clinics in the
Inland Empire, and they "help people get  their medicine they can't
get through collectives and  storefronts," said Lanny Swerdlow,
president of the  Inland Empire chapter of the Marijuana
Anti-Prohibition  Project.

The clinics are illegal in Los Angeles, Riverside and  San Bernardino
counties.

"Steve Cooley says everything is illegal. Here (in  Riverside and San
Bernardino counties) it's illegal not  because that's illegal, but
because it violates zoning  ordinances," Swerdlow said.

Chavez received a business license in Pomona for a  Tasty Licks shaved
ice company in 1996. It was not  renewed in 2009. He declined to
comment on the status  of his business license.

The Associated Press contributed to this story. 
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jo-D