Medical Marijuana Advocates Appeal Conviction of San Diego Dispensary Operator
Court to decide on legality of "sales" & whether dispensary operators are entitled to a defenseSan Diego, CA -- Medical marijuana patient advocacy group
Americans for Safe Access (ASA) today appealed the September 2010
conviction of
San Diego dispensary operator Jovan Jackson in a case that has
received widespread attention. The case against Jackson has become a
symbol of the effort by District Attorney Bonnie Dumanis and other
prosecutors across the state to criminalize storefront collectives.
Due to state jurisprudence, California Attorney General Kamala
Harris will now defend Jackson's appeal rather than Dumanis, who
originally tried him. The ASA appeal not only contests Jackson's
conviction and his denial of a defense, but it also challenges the
prosecution's assertion that "sales" of medical marijuana are
illegal under state law.
"Jackson and other medical marijuana providers deserve a defense
under the state's medical marijuana laws and these are issues for a
jury to decide," said ASA Chief Counsel Joe Elford, who authored the
appeal brief filed today. "The denial of Jackson's defense was
unfairly used to convict a medical marijuana provider who was in
full compliance with state law." At Jackson's trial, San Diego
Superior Court Judge Howard Shore referred to medical marijuana as
"dope," and called California's medical marijuana laws "a scam."
The Jackson case represents one of the first medical
marijuana-related criminal appeals for Harris, who was elected one
year ago after a hard-fought campaign against Los Angeles District
Attorney Steve Cooley. Before taking office as Attorney General,
Harris was the San Francisco District Attorney during the
implementation and enforcement of her city's dispensary licensing
ordinance, one of the first in the nation.
Jackson operated his storefront collective for years without
incident until he was raided by law enforcement in 2008. Jackson was
tried for marijuana possession and sales in 2009, but was acquitted
by a jury. Dissatisfied with that result, District Attorney Dumanis
tried Jackson again on the same charges stemming from a September
2009 raid by a multi-agency task force made up of local and federal
law enforcement. It was at his second trial that Jackson was denied
a defense and ultimately convicted. Judge Shore gave Jackson 180
days in jail before his conviction was appealed.
Several District Attorneys have asserted that medical marijuana
"sales" are illegal under state law, despite guidelines issued in
2008 by the California Attorney General and legal case law to the
contrary. This contention -- that patients must take part in
collective cultivation and "till the soil" -- has been used to deny
Jackson a defense, even though other lower courts, like those in Los
Angeles and Butte Counties, take a differing view.
For example, in Williams v. Butte County, the Superior Court
held that, "the legislature intended collective cultivation of
medical marijuana would not require physical participation in the
gardening process by all members of the collective, but rather would
permit that some patients would be able to contribute financially,
while others performed the labor and contributed the skills and
'know-how.'"
Jackson is currently out on bail pending appeal, but he no longer
operates his medical marijuana collective. The Attorney General has
30 days to reply to the appeal.
Further information:
Jackson appeal brief filed by ASA: http://AmericansForSafeAccess.org/downloads/Jackson_Appeal.pdf