Feds indict medical pot dispensary operators
,The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration announced a set of indictments
Tuesday alleging that operators of nearly a dozen medical marijuana
dispensaries — including two in West Hollywood — profiteered from the
illegal distribution of pot.
Among
those accused are the operators of Compassionate Caregivers, a
chain-store medical marijuana operation that did more than $95 million
in business.
"These dispensary operators are no different than any other drug
trafficker: They prey on people in our communities to make a profit,"
said Timothy J. Landrum, special agent in charge of the DEA in Los
Angeles.
Authorities
say the owners of Compassionate Caregivers, Larry R. Kristich and James
Carberry, ran dispensaries in Oakland, San Francisco, San Leandro,
Ukiah, Bakersfield, San Diego and West Hollywood.
The
indictment alleges that profits from marijuana sales were used to
purchase expensive automobiles and real estate in Costa Rica. At a West
Hollywood shop known as Yellow House, operators accepted credit cards
and did more than $1.7 million in business in a single month, the
indictment contends.
Others indicted included the operators of
dispensaries in Corona and Morro Bay, where patients were charged two
to three times the street value of marijuana, according to San Luis
Obispo County Undersheriff Steve Bolts.
He called it "a
super-sized retail drug-dealing center working under the cloak and
smoke of Prop. 215," the 1996 ballot measure that legalized medical
cannabis in California.
Also indicted in Morro Bay was Dr.
Armand T. Tollette Jr. He is accused of writing marijuana
recommendations for minors, failing to conduct physical examinations
and paying "finder's fees" in marijuana for client referrals. Under
federal law, conspiracy to distribute marijuana carries a sentence of
up to 40 years in prison.