Federal Sentencing of Legally Compliant Medical Marijuana Providers Highlights Harmful Obama Policy
Justice Department uses prosecutorial discretion to seek decades in prison for legal Michigan cultivatorsDetroit, MI -- Five medical marijuana patients and
caregivers will be sentenced in federal court next week,
highlighting the human
cost of the federal government’s intolerance for state medical
marijuana laws.
Two medical marijuana caregivers from Monroe County who were
convicted earlier this year in federal court will be sentenced at
3pm Monday,
October 1st before U.S. District Court Judge David M. Lawson (231 W.
Lafayette
Blvd, Detroit). Gerald Lee Duval Jr., 52, and his son, Jeremy Duval,
30, were
raided by Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) agents in 2011 and
charged with
felony cultivation, maintaining a place to cultivate marijuana, and
conspiracy
to distribute. In April, the Duvals were convicted at trial, the
expected
result of federal laws that prohibit any medical defense or
reference to state
law in front of juries.
"The Duvals' case is another tragedy from President Obama's
war on medical marijuana," said Steph Sherer, Executive Director of
Americans
for Safe Access (ASA), the country’s leading medical marijuana
advocacy group. "This type of enforcement is completely
discretionary, unnecessary and far from
the public health approach that medical marijuana patients deserve."
The Duvals
face decades in prison despite no evidence of state law violations.
Days later, three more medical marijuana patients and
caregivers will be sentenced in federal court in Michigan. Around
the same time
federal agents were raiding the Duvals, officers with the Central
Michigan
Enforcement Team (CMET) and the Mecosta County Sheriff's Department
raided the
Austin Township home and other property of John Marcinkewciz, 42,
and Shelley
Waldron, 42. Marcinkewciz, Waldron and Jaycob Montague, 26, were
originally
charged under state law with cultivation and conspiracy to
cultivate, but
prosecutors soon turned their cases over to the federal Justice
Department,
where the three had no chance of defending themselves against
federal law. Marcinkewciz,
Waldron and Montague all subsequently took plea bargains in May.
Waldron and Montague are scheduled to be sentenced at 8:45am
on October 4th before Judge Robert Bell in U.S. District Court at
110 Michigan
Street NW, Grand Rapids. Marcinkewciz is scheduled to be sentenced
at 8:45am on
October 5th before the same judge. In spite of the plea bargains,
the three
medical marijuana providers still face decades in prison.
"The federal raids and prosecutions in Michigan are
unfortunately only an example of the broader aggressive campaign by
the Obama
Administration to undermine state medical marijuana laws," continued
Sherer.
As with the Duval raid, DEA agents commonly burst onto the scene
wearing full
body armor and wielding machine guns in a clear attempt to
intimidate. Despite
claims by the president that he was "not going to be using Justice
Department
resources to try to circumvent state laws," Obama's Justice
Department has
conducted more than 200 SWAT-style raids and indicted well over 70
medical marijuana
patients and providers since he took office.
A federal lawsuit to force the DEA to reclassify marijuana
for medical use will be heard by the D.C. Circuit on October 16th.
The case Americans
for Safe Access v. DEA is bringing the science of medical
marijuana into
federal court for the first time in nearly 20 years. If marijuana
were
reclassified, it would pave the way for a medical marijuana defense in federal court.