URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v12/n307/a09.html
Newshawk: http://www.drugsense.org/donate.htm
Votes: 1
Pubdate: Sat, 09 Jun 2012
Source: Spokesman-Review (Spokane, WA)
Copyright: 2012 The Spokesman-Review
Contact:
Website: http://www.spokesman.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/417
Author: Meghann M. Cuniff
GROW HOUSE SEARCH RULED ILLEGAL
Officers Didn't Consider Medical Marijuana Law Change
U.S. District Judge Frem Nielsen's ruling to suppress all materials
gathered from a raid of a large marijuana grow house in northwest
Spokane County stems from a rewrite of the law approved by
legislators last year that specifically stated possessing medical
marijuana was not a crime.
A recent court ruling that deemed a drug raid illegal has raised
questions about how law enforcement in Spokane County investigate
marijuana growers.
Sheriff's detectives had reason to believe marijuana was being grown
at a northwest Spokane County home when they raided it Nov. 2, but
they didn't have reason to believe the growers were violating the
state's medical marijuana law or at least they didn't say they did
when they got authorization from a local judge to search the home.
A federal judge ruled the search violated Washington's recently
expanded law governing medicinal marijuana and last week prohibited
prosecutors from using marijuana plants and other items seized at the
large grow house.
Now a federal grand jury indictment against five young men, two of
whom have previous drug convictions, is in limbo, and drug detectives
in Spokane are wondering how they'll continue investigating marijuana growers.
"We're kind of biding our time to see how this thing turns out," said
sheriff's Detective Lloyd Hixson, who investigated the case. "We
probably don't want to spend a whole bunch of energy investigating
something that's going to get thrown out."
George Trejo, a Yakima-based lawyer who represents one of the men
charged, said he doesn't believe the government has enough evidence
to proceed. The ruling by U.S. District Judge Frem Nielsen suppressed
everything gathered during the search, including statements made by defendants.
The U.S. Attorney's Office has asked Nielsen to reconsider his
decision. The office did not return phone calls seeking comment this week.
Hixson said he was "floored" by Nielsen's decision and is hopeful it
will be reversed. He said he and his coworkers are awaiting feedback
from county prosecutors about how the ruling might affect cases
prosecuted in state court. If the ruling stands, "It would really
frustrate our ability to investigate marijuana grows," Hixson said.
The ruling stems from a rewrite of the law approved by legislators
last year that specifically stated possessing medical marijuana was
not a crime.
Before then, medical marijuana was considered a defense law
enforcement could arrest users and make them prove their case in
court. That changed in July, but Spokane County sheriff's detectives
didn't consider that when they raided the home last year, Nielsen ruled.
"The 3-month-old law was clear, and the officers should have been
aware of its requirements," the judge said.
Two suspects, Jerad J. Kynaston, 23, and Samuel M. Doyle, 25, were
released from jail last week. Each have previous convictions in
Oregon for possessing 10 pounds of marijuana and had been in custody
since a federal grand jury indicted them in February.
Kynaston also was convicted in Spokane County in 2009 for possessing
5 pounds of marijuana.
Three other suspects, Jayde D. Evans, 24, Brice C. Davis, 25, and
Tyler S. McKinley, 27, were out of jail awaiting trial. Two others,
Corey E. Mobley, 29, and Peter M. Magana, 23, pleaded guilty prior to
the judge's decision to throw out all evidence against them. Magana
is seeking to be released from jail despite a sentencing scheduled
for Sept. 12. A judge is set to consider his request June 11.
"Imagine how they feel?" said Trejo, who represents Doyle. "They
could be pretty screwed unless the government wanted to say, you know
what, we believe your guilty plea should be set aside. I doubt
they'll do that."
In court documents, prosecutors argued that the Washington
Legislature did not intend to change the affirmative defense when
they rewrote it. In his ruling, Nielsen called that opinion a
"tortured reading" of the law that contradicts its plain language.
Hixson and other detectives with the Spokane County sheriff's drug
unit arrested the suspects Nov. 2 during a search at 11900 N. Judkins
Road, which is west of Newman Lake and east of Forker Road. A news
release at the time said they seized 8 pounds of harvested marijuana,
695 marijuana plants and 500 plants that recently had been harvested.
The release noted that medical marijuana provider forms were located
at the home and that a patient had told sheriff's detectives that he
contracted with someone at the Judkins Road address to supply him
medical marijuana, but that the grower was selling it to other people.
It also noted that the state medical marijuana law had recently been
changed to allow up to 10 people to grow up to 45 plants together.
But it didn't mention the change in the law that Nielsen ruled is so
crucial to law enforcement investigations.
Hixson said it's difficult to know whether suspected marijuana grows
are legal under medical marijuana laws without searching them.
He said the power supply at the Judkins Road home was extraordinarily
high and showed much more usage than just a 45-plant operation.
But in most cases, "you just don't know that for sure," he said. "It
depends on how many lights are being used, the quality of the
lighting" and other factors.
There also isn't a database of authorized medical marijuana users
that law enforcement can access, he said.
"For 99 percent of our marijuana grows, we just simply wouldn't be
able to write the warrant anymore," Hixson said. "It kind of ties our hands."
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom
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