Medical Marijuana Groups File Brief in Support of Mendocino's Refusal to Turn Over Cultivation Records to Feds
Advocates support county's motion to quash, argue Obama Administration is attempting to undermine state law, violate patient privacySan Francisco, CA -- Two medical marijuana groups have
teamed up to support Mendocino County officials in their effort to
fight a sweeping federal subpoena filed in October, seeking "any and
all records" for the county's medical marijuana cultivation program,
otherwise known as County Code 9.31. On December 21st, Mendocino
County filed a motion in San Francisco federal court to quash the
Justice Department's subpoena, and today Americans for Safe Access
(ASA) and the Emerald Growers Association (EGA)
filed a joint amicus 'friend of the court' brief in an attempt to
protect the private patient records being sought. A hearing in the
case is scheduled for later in the month, before federal District
Court Judge Richard Seeborg in San Francisco.
"Despite telling Americans that medical marijuana patients are not
being targeted, the Obama Administration's contempt for them and its
intent to undermine California's medical marijuana law has been laid
bare with this subpoena," said ASA Chief Counsel Joe Elford, who
co-authored the amicus brief filed today. "Mendocino County is
completely justified in its refusal to cooperate with the grand jury
subpoena and we're proud to support the county officials in that
effort." The amicus brief called the subpoena "needlessly broad" and
argued it would have "serious and longstanding repercussions" by
"reveal[ing] privileged and confidential medical information...[and]
undermin[ing] the County's considered and thoughtful attempts to
regulate medical marijuana pursuant to state law."
In what has turned into one of the fiercest battlegrounds between
California officials and the Obama Administration, the U.S. Justice
Department has aggressively gone after one of the only cultivation
registration programs in the state. Before the program was shut down
in March due to threats of federal injunctions from U.S. Attorney
Melinda Haag, registrants were allowed to collectively grow up to 99
plants and were sold zip ties for $50 per plant to show they were
being cultivated in compliance with state law.
The Mendocino cultivation program had been of longstanding interest
to the Obama Administration. In 2010, the federal Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA) raided the legal crop of Joy Greenfield, who
was the first cultivator to register with the Sheriff’s Office in
the widely popular program that raised hundreds of thousands of
dollars of new revenue for the county. No arrests were made in the
Greenfield raid, but all of her and her patients’ medicine was
destroyed. The DEA then raided the registered farm of Matt Cohen and
Northstone Organics in October 2011, destroying medical marijuana
that was meant for hundreds of patients across the state.
A federal subpoena for the records of 17 patients held by the Oregon
Medical Marijuana Program (OMMP) was quashed in 2007, after the
Oregon Attorney General successfully defended the OMMP and the
privacy rights of patients in federal court. California Attorney General Kamala
Harris has not yet commented on the federal subpoena in Mendocino
County.
"It was not enough for the Justice Department to shut down
Mendocino's cultivation program," continued Elford. "It seems the
federal government will stop at nothing to crush attempts by local
officials to regulate the cultivation of medical marijuana." In a
previous statement, coalition partner EGA said that these latest
federal actions "undermine and chill the County's ability to
effectively regulate cannabis cultivation," and "endanger the public
health, welfare and safety of Mendocino County residents."
Further information:
Coalition amicus brief filed today: http://AmericansForSafeAccess.org/downloads/Mendocino_Amicus_Brief.pdf
Mendocino County's motion to quash: http://AmericansForSafeAccess.org/downloads/Mendocino_MTQ.pdf
Federal grand jury subpoena: http://AmericansForSafeAccess.org/downloads/Mendocino_Subpoena.pdf