Pubdate: Mon, 6 Sep 2010
Source: South Oakland Eccentric (MI)
Copyright: 2010 Observer & Eccentric Newspapers
Contact: http://www.hometownlife.com/contactus
Website: http://www.hometownlife.com/section/NEWS20
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5175
Author: Steve Kowalski, Eccentric Staff Writer
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Michigan+medical+marijuana
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?275 (Cannabis - Michigan)

CO-OWNER: MARIJUANA CLINIC STILL OPERATING

FERNDALE - Nine defendants charged in last month's medical marijuana 
bust in Ferndale will face a pre-exam conference at 1 p.m. Monday, 
Sept. 20, before Judge Joseph Longo, according to a spokeswoman in 
43rd District Court in Ferndale. The exam set for last Thursday was adjourned.

The co-owners of a medical marijuana facility on Hilton Road were 
among nine arraigned Aug. 27 in Hazel Park, the other jurisdiction of 
43rd District Court, on felony charges, including allegations of 
conspiracy and the illegal manufacture and delivery of marijuana. The 
charges followed an Aug. 25 raid by deputies from the Oakland County 
Sheriff's Office.

Ryan Richmond, a 33-year-old Royal Oak resident and co-owner of 
Clinical Relief at 326 Hilton, said he didn't know he would be 
charged until he arrived in court in support of the eight arrested 
during the police raid.

Magistrate James Paterson charged Richmond with conspiracy to commit 
the delivery/manufacture of marijuana, a felony punishable by up to 
four years and/or a $30,000 fine, according to a court spokeswoman in 
Ferndale, where the cases were filed after the arraignment.

"My charges were given to me five minutes before the actual 
arraignments," Richmond said after being released on personal bond 
following the Friday hearing.

The other eight defendants were among 15 arrested during several Aug. 
25 raids conducted by the Oakland County Sheriff's Office, netting 
hundreds of pounds of marijuana with a street value estimated at 
$750,000, and several firearms, according to Sheriff Michael Bouchard.

Police also raided Everybody's Cafe in Waterford, individual homes in 
Birmingham and Lake Orion and a warehouse in Macomb County, according 
to Bouchard.

Clinical Relief, on the east side of Hilton, three blocks north of 
Eight Mile, and the Waterford medical marijuana facility are 
separately owned and operated, according to the sheriff's office.

Richmond said he sells venture capital and commercial real estate and 
operates the medical marijuana facilities as a side job. Clinical 
Relief remained open as of last week, he said.

"We never got a 'cease to exist' (notice)," he said. "We did nothing 
wrong. I don't think you should deny needy patients because of a few agendas."

Ferndale police Lt. William Wilson said Clinical Relief is entitled 
to continue operations during the trial, as long as it operates 
"within the confines of the law." Wilson said the Ferndale police are 
not part of the investigation into the allegations of illegal 
delivery and manufacture of marijuana.

"As far as I know they're still (open)," Wilson said.

The raid was part of a weeks-long investigation at Clinical Relief 
and Everybody's Cafe, on suspicion of the illegal manufacture, 
possession and selling of large quantities of marijuana, according to Bouchard.

The Michigan Medical Marijuana Act became law after a statewide 
ballot proposal was approved in November 2008 by more than 60 percent 
of voters. It allows a medical marijuana caregiver to grow up to 12 
plants or sell 2.5 ounces of marijuana to five patients who qualify 
under the Michigan Department of Community Health.

A not-guilty plea was entered for each of the nine defendants at the 
43rd District Court arraignments, according to the court spokeswoman. 
Each was released on a $10,000 personal bond, the spokeswoman said.

Richmond's business partner, Matthew Curtis of Lake Orion, was 
arrested during the Aug. 25 raid and charged with one count of 
conspiracy to commit the delivery and manufacture of marijuana and 
two counts of delivery and manufacture of marijuana, the court 
spokeswoman said. A conviction on the delivery and manufacture 
charges carries up to four years in prison and/or a $20,000 fine for 
each count, according to the court spokeswoman.

The seven others charged include:

. Barbara Johnson of Leonard, one count of conspiracy to commit the 
delivery/manufacture of marijuana; four counts of 
delivery/manufacture of marijuana.

. Derek Anderson of Ferndale, one count of conspiracy to commit 
delivery/manufacture of marijuana; one count of delivery/manufacture 
of marijuana.

. Anthony Agro of Troy, one count of conspiracy to commit the 
delivery/manufacture of marijuana; seven counts of 
delivery/manufacture of marijuana.

. Angelina Veseli of Roseville, one count of conspiracy to commit 
delivery/manufacture of marijuana; two counts of delivery/manufacture 
of marijuana.

. Barbara Agro of Lake Orion, one count of conspiracy to commit 
delivery/manufacture of marijuana; five counts of 
delivery/manufacture of marijuana.

. Nicholas Agro of Lake Orion, conspiracy to commit the 
delivery/manufacture of marijuana.

. Ryan Fleissner of Livonia, one count of conspiracy to commit the 
delivery/manufacture of marijuana; two counts of delivery/manufacture 
of marijuana.

Robert Bruner, city manager for Ferndale, said Thursday that the 
city's intention is to enforce several amendments to a zoning 
ordinance and a regulatory ordinance passed by the City Council at 
its Aug. 23 public meeting. The City Council also voted to lift a 
moratorium on medical marijuana-related businesses operating within 
city limits at that meeting, Bruner said.

"The city has a law on the books to keep track of how much medical 
marijuana is on site, who is allowed to have it," Bruner said. 
"That's what the city is concentrating on enforcing. We're not 
involved with the raid or prosecution that's going on. Unless a judge 
should order a business shut, I don't know what authority the city 
has to do so.

"(The defendants) are innocent until proven guilty as far as the 
state law goes. The risk they're running is, if they've been raided 
and charged once, and continue to operate (as its alleged), the 
county sheriff could come in, raid and arrest them again. That's 
between the Clinical Relief and the county sheriff and not something 
the city is directly involved in." 
- ---
MAP posted-by: Richard Lake