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Pot trial focus on DEA agent
BY J.K. DINEEN
Of The Examiner Staff
Of The Examiner Staff
http://examiner.com/news/default.jsp?story=n.potappeal.0128w0
Did a top DEA agent tell local medical marijuana advocates they would be left alone by the feds?
The question was the center of legal skirmishing Monday, as lawyers for marijuana guru Ed Rosenthal filed an appeal in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals trying to force Judge Charles Breyer to allow testimony from Mary Pat Jacobs, a key defense witness. Rosenthal faces up to life in prison for cultivating marijuana and conspiracy.
In a sworn affidavit, Sonoma Alliance for Medical Marijuana spokeswoman Mary Pat Jacobs testified that she had several conversations about medical marijuana with Drug Enforcement Administration Supervisor Mike Heald.
During those conversations, Heald stated, "the DEA was not interested in interfering" with the implementation of Proposition 215, the medical marijuana law passed by California voters in 1996, according to Jacobs' Jan. 16 testimony.
She also said she regularly discussed Heald's alleged comments with Rosenthal, leaving the pot advocate and writer with the impression that he was on solid legal ground in experimenting with the growth of different types of cannabis.
Breyer -- who has said that medicinal marijuana is not relevant to Rosenthal's drug cultivation case -- has instructed the jury to ignore any testimony touching on the medical uses of the marijuana Rosenthal has openly admitted to growing.
Attempts to reach Heald on Monday were unsuccessful.
"We're trying to do whatever we can to reverse the decision," said William Simpich, an attorney for Rosenthal.
The defense initially sought to have Heald testify but said that Breyer said Jacobs' statement would be enough to establish that the conversations took place.
E-mail: jdineen [at] examiner.com
Did a top DEA agent tell local medical marijuana advocates they would be left alone by the feds?
The question was the center of legal skirmishing Monday, as lawyers for marijuana guru Ed Rosenthal filed an appeal in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals trying to force Judge Charles Breyer to allow testimony from Mary Pat Jacobs, a key defense witness. Rosenthal faces up to life in prison for cultivating marijuana and conspiracy.
In a sworn affidavit, Sonoma Alliance for Medical Marijuana spokeswoman Mary Pat Jacobs testified that she had several conversations about medical marijuana with Drug Enforcement Administration Supervisor Mike Heald.
During those conversations, Heald stated, "the DEA was not interested in interfering" with the implementation of Proposition 215, the medical marijuana law passed by California voters in 1996, according to Jacobs' Jan. 16 testimony.
She also said she regularly discussed Heald's alleged comments with Rosenthal, leaving the pot advocate and writer with the impression that he was on solid legal ground in experimenting with the growth of different types of cannabis.
Breyer -- who has said that medicinal marijuana is not relevant to Rosenthal's drug cultivation case -- has instructed the jury to ignore any testimony touching on the medical uses of the marijuana Rosenthal has openly admitted to growing.
Attempts to reach Heald on Monday were unsuccessful.
"We're trying to do whatever we can to reverse the decision," said William Simpich, an attorney for Rosenthal.
The defense initially sought to have Heald testify but said that Breyer said Jacobs' statement would be enough to establish that the conversations took place.
E-mail: jdineen [at] examiner.com
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