Pubdate: Tue, 26 Jan 1999 Source: Associated Press Copyright: 1999 Associated Press Note: MAP is one of the sponsors of the "Wed., Jan. 27 - Nat'l Free the Kubbys Call-In Day." Please support this effort. Let the AG and the local DA know what you think! Details are at: http://www.levellers.org/sk_callin.htm LOCKYER WON'T GET INVOLVED IN PROSECUTION OF GUBERNATORIAL CANDIDATE TAHOE CITY, Calif. (AP) -- Attorney General Bill Lockyer won't intervene in the prosecution of the 1998 California Libertarian candidate for governor and his wife, who are accused of growing marijuana plants at their home. The state's Libertarian Party sent a letter to Lockyer urging his support. But a Lockyer spokeswoman told the Auburn Journal that the attorney general would not get involved in the case despite his support of Proposition 215, the California medical marijuana initiative. "Mr. Lockyer voted for Prop. 215 and supported it, but he did not go out and campaign for the measure," press secretary Hilary McLean said. Steve Kubby, and his wife, Michele, were arrested Jan. 19 after a search warrant served at their Olympic Valley home resulted in the discovery of 360 plants in four rooms. The couple claimed to be growing marijuana for medical use under a doctor's direction. Prosecutors said they will be charged with felony counts of cultivation, possession for sale and conspiracy at their arraignment Thursday. Steven Kubby was a key proponent of Proposition 215, and openly described using marijuana, during his gubernatorial campaign, for the adrenal cancer he has had for more than two decades. In a letter to Lockyer, state Libertarian Party chairman Mark Hinkle called on the attorney general "to bring the full weight of your office down in this matter and investigate the North Tahoe Task Force and Placer County District Attorney's Office to determine the cause of this unnecessary police action." Hinkle also noted the more than 5 million Californians who voted for Proposition 215 in 1996. Kubby, 52, publisher of an online recreation magazine, ran fourth in the race for governor last November, taking nearly 1 percent of the vote. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake