Pubdate: Wed, 30 June 1999
Source: Auburn Journal
Copyright: 1999 Auburn Journal 
Contact:  1030 High St., Auburn, CA 95603
Website: http://www.auburnjournal.com/ 
Author: Gus Thomson, Journal Staff Writer
Note: To find your local station and time for the "Inside Edition" segment
being shown Friday, 2 July, visit (you may want to check quickly - my local
station shows it at 6:00 a.m.!):
http://www.inside-edition.com/index11.htm
Also: More details are in the DrugSense FOCUS Alert at:
http://www.mapinc.org/alert/0114.html

KUBBY ASKS COUNTY SUPERVISORS FOR HELP MEDICAL POT CASE TESTS LAW

Facing a trial in Placer County on felony marijuana charges, high-profile
medical pot proponent Steven Kubby has written to supervisors asking them
to turn up the heat on the people who busted him.

Kubby and his wife, Michele, are scheduled to go to trial July 20 in
connection with a drug raid on their Olympic Valley home and confiscation
of 265 marijuana plants. They maintain the plants are for their own
personal use and are legal under Proposition 215, the medicinal marijuana
law passed by voters in 1996.

Kubby's letter describes the Jan. 19 raid and the impact on his family.
Noting he presented medical documentation before his arrest and the seizure
of his plants, Kubby is calling on supervisors to "protect the sick and
dying members of your community" and investigate the investigators.

The Kubbys have filed bankruptcy since the raid and are living in Orange
County.

In an interview, Kubby said the letter is a call to action for supervisors
to investigate and use their influence to change law enforcement procedure.
Instead of arresting people who are growing marijuana under the tenets of
Prop. 215 as potential sellers, investigators should be determining who the
sellers are first.

"It's lazy police work if you can't get out there and show someone is
selling," Kubby said. "We have to wake up and realize this is a serious
violation of human rights."

Placer County Sheriff's Department spokesman Lt. Dan Hall said the Kubbys
face serious felony charges so the department is unable to comment.
Auburn-area Supervisor Harriet White said Monday that supervisors received
a lengthy treatise from Kubby and referred it to the County Counsel's
Office. "This is a judicial problem and although he might be using a
substance for medical reasons, there's still the concern on the part of law
enforcement that they make sure everything is done properly," White said.
"Whether his human rights were violated when they were checking, I don't
know." On the question of arresting the Kubbys, White said she doesn't know
all the facts. But the decision on seeking continued incarceration is a
judgment call by the District Attorney's Office, she said.

Kubby, who polled 65,000 votes as the Libertarian gubernatorial candidate
in the last election, can speak for himself, White said.

"People get in touch with me and I check (on some law enforcement
complaints) but I think Steven Kubby can handle things on his own," White
said. Kubby said he rejects the idea of having medicinal marijuana users
register with law enforcement and submit to inspections of their pot
gardening efforts on demand. It's a solution now being used by the federal
government in Canada.

In San Jose and San Francisco, law enforcement "grabbed" records and used
them to "track down" users, Kubby said.

Kubby's letter states that dozens of medicinal marijuana patients have been
"raided, arrested, humiliated, looted and destroyed" by Placer County
Sheriff's Department "all in a vain attempt to uphold a corrupt and failing
drug policy."

Questioned in an interview, Kubby said he had no personal documentation on
"several dozen" patients involved in the alleged raids.

Kubby, 52, smokes marijuana because he was diagnosed 23 years ago with
cancer of the adrenal gland. He recently underwent a new series of tests
under the cancer specialist who initially diagnosed the fatal disease. The
doctor said it was still present. Michele Kubby, 32, also has a doctor's
recommendation to use marijuana - as treatment for an intestinal disorder.

The upcoming trial is considered a potentially major test case for Prop.
215. The couple face charges of conspiracy and possession with intent to sell.

Kubby is also making his case known to the national news media. A news
release faxed by Kubby to media throughout the country said the nationally
syndicated, tabloid news program "Inside Edition" will air a segment on his
case. "Inside Edition" is telecast on ABC's KXTV Channel 10 in the
Sacramento area at 1:06 a.m. Saturday. Kubby said his story has generated
more than 100 news articles since his arrest. 
- ---
MAP posted-by: Richard Lake