Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Contact:  213-237-4712
Website:  http://www.latimes.com/
Pubdate: February 27, 1998
Author: Maria L. La Ganga, Mary Curtius, Times Staff Writers

SAN FRANSISCO JUDGE ORDERS CO-OP TO STOP SELLING POT

Attorney general says medical marijuana club should be shut down. Founder
vows to keep operating.

SAN FRANCISCO--A Superior Court judge late Thursday ordered the Cannabis
Cultivator's Co-op to stop selling, storing or giving away medical
marijuana, but the defiant founder of the organization said he intends to
stay in business.

The brief decision by San Francisco Superior Court Judge David Garcia set
up  another showdown between Dennis Peron, the club's founder, and state
Atty.  Gen. Dan Lungren. The two men are both Republican candidates for
governor  and die-hard opponents on the issue of medical marijuana.

Lungren's office said the decision means that the club should be shut down
immediately and that the San Francisco Sheriff's Department has been
contacted to carry out that action.

"A preliminary injunction was issued," said Matt Ross, a spokesman for
Lungren. "It calls for the club's closure. It's effective today." But a
spokeswoman for Sheriff Michael Hennessy said the department has received
no notification or order. As of Thursday evening, the co-op was  still in
operation.  In fact, law enforcement officials and political leaders have
long supported  Peron's club and are not expected to move against it.

"We're all together on wanting to make this thing [medical marijuana] work
in San Francisco," said Dist. Atty. Terence Hallinan. "Eighty percent of
the  people here voted for it. . . . I've gone in and checked [the co-op]
out.  I'm satisfied with the way they're operating. . . . I'm not doing
anything.  This is a civil dispute between Lungren and Peron. I'll let them
work it out."

Garcia's decision comes one day after the state Supreme Court cleared the
way for state officials to close down medical marijuana clubs. On
Wednesday,  the high court decided not to review a lower court ruling
declaring that  Proposition 215 provided no protection for the clubs. The
proposition, written by Peron and passed in 1996, only protected a person's
right to use marijuana to ease the pain and nausea of such ailments  as
cancer, AIDS and glaucoma, according to the December lower court ruling.
But it did not provide any right to sell the drug.  Peron, however, insists
that he is not selling marijuana and that he is  operating legally under
the guidelines set by that December appeals court  decision.

"When the Dec. 12 decision came down, we changed our MO to go according to
that decision," Peron said. "We stopped selling marijuana. The court said
it  was illegal. But they said we could be reimbursed for the cannabis that
we  cultivate as bona fide caregivers for our patients."  J. David Nick,
Peron's attorney, said: "There is nothing in Garcia's order  to say that
the doors of 1444 Market St. are to be closed and the sheriff  shall carry
this order out."

He added that although the order does restrict the manner in which Peron
may  distribute marijuana, it continues to allow him "to provide those
individuals who have a health need for marijuana to continue to receive
that  service from him."  That is not how Lungren sees it.

"My office has argued all along that Proposition 215 allows for only three
things: a doctor to recommend marijuana, a patient to use marijuana with a
doctor's recommendation, and a primary caregiver--a friend, a loved one, a
neighbor, a nurse who consistently checks on the patient's needs--to
provide  marijuana should the patient be unable to provide for himself or
herself,"  Lungren said in a statement.

Nick said that he will return to court Monday to ask for clarification of
Garcia's order.  If the sheriff's office makes no move to shut down the
club, Ross said, the  attorney general's office "will handle it." However,
he refused to elaborate  on what action Lungren would take or when he would
take it.

Peron has been in and out of the courts for more than a year fighting for
his medical marijuana operation, which serves 9,000 patients.

If Lungren sends officers to shut him down, he says, "I'm gonna take a page
out of the civil rights era. I'm gonna go perfectly limp. Let them carry
me  away. They'll take our medicine, break down our doors. When they leave,
we'll put back the doors and redecorate."

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