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Smith said five employees of the elections office finished two weeks of counting 19,911 signatures yesterday afternoon.  They found the recall drive produced 13,942 valid signatures on Kamena recall petitions - 186 more than legally required.  Smith said he would ask the board on Jan.  9 to call an election for May within 14 days.  If the board declines to do so, Smith said he would be obligated by law to set the election himself.  He said elections officials are considering a special election date of May 15 or 22.  The petition drive targeting Kamena was launched in May amid a surge of community resentment about decisions in the Marin courts in cases involving child custody disputes.  These cases included the prosecution by the District Attorney's Office of a Novato woman who attempted to take custody of her own daughter in violation of a court order.  Four judges were also targeted in the recall effort.  But as the campaigns against the judges dissipated, a second wave of opposition descended on Kamena, led by critics of her office's marijuana prosecution policies.  The medical pot forces, led by a handful of paid signature gatherers, put the Kamena recall campaign over the top.  Kamena said she was disappointed to hear of the petition drive's success, and she reiterated her suspicion that recall backers used misleading tactics in gathering signatures.  She also accused opponents of using the recall process to strong-arm her into adopting more lenient policies for people claiming a medicinal need for marijuana.  Kamena claims the recall grows out of longstanding opposition by the Marin Alliance for Medical Marijuana to county efforts to launch its own licensing process for medical marijuana patients.  "This is not about medical marijuana," Kamena said.  "This is about someone or some group with one issue trying to misuse the political recall process to get their way.  Kamena's critics, led by Lynnette Shaw of the Marin Alliance, raised an estimated $15,000 to hire signature gatherers and otherwise support the Kamena recall.  Shaw delivered three boxes of recall petitions to Smith's office last month.  News of the submissions prompted some people to call in complaints, claiming they were misled into signing petitions by people who spoke only of support for medical marijauna and nothing about a Kamena recall.  Despite indications that it was the medical pot forces that led the petition drive to success, Smith said it's likely ballot arguments in next May's special election won't mention medical marijuana.  He said that instead, arguments supporting the recall likely will be limited to claims of abuse by Kamena's office in the recent prosecution of Carol Mardeusz, a Novato mother who was convicted by a jury of attempting to abduct her own daughter in violation of a court order forbidding her from contacting the girl.  That's because recall petition circulated in Marin this summer and fall mentioned only the Mardeusz case, Smith said.  Kamena said complaints of misleading tactics led her to believe voters who signed the recall petitions didn't know what they were supporting.  She said she had been contacted by a man at a San Rafael shopping center who urged her to sign the petition, without mentioning a recall.  But she said she won't be taking any action to challenge the recall campaign in court.  Instead, she said she will reactivate her campaign committee and focus her energy on urging voters not to support the recall.  "If the citizens of Marin County want to have an election I will do everything I can to show that I'm doing an excellent job and that the recall is a bad idea," Kamena said.  Shaw could not be reached for comment yesterday afternoon.  Prosecution guidelines adopted by Kamena's office last year made county certification a central requirement for people seeking a medical exemption to avoid prosecution for possession or cultivation of marijuana.  Shaw has said the guidelines were no good because some local police departments disregarded them by seizing any marijuana they found and sending cases to the district attorney even when the D.A.'s guidelines had been met.  According to Shaw, some Alliance members have since had their plants seized and destroyed, even after Kamena's office has accepted their claims of legitimate medical use and declined to file charges.  Kamena said that much of this criticism is better put to local police agencies that take action against pot growers.  She said her office's medical marijuana policies are among the most progressive in the state and make a good-faith effort to recognize a person's rights to medical marijuana under Prop.  215, the medical pot initiative passed by state voters in 1996.  Smith said the recall election would cost an estimated $500,000 to hold.  He said these costs woud go toward the printing of ballots and ballot booklets and staffing all 113 polling places in Marin on the day of the election.  Kamena, who swept into office in 1998 with the support of 56 percent of Marin voters, said it's a shame the county will have to bear such a high cost, especially since she would have to run for re-election in March 2002 anyway. 

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