For Immediate Release: January 31st, 2013
Montana Medical Marijuana Cultivator Chris Williams to be Sentenced Friday in Federal Court
Advocates travel 3,300 miles to support Williams, protest federal attacks on medical Marijuana
Missoula, MT -- Montana medical marijuana cultivator Chris
Williams is scheduled to be sentenced Friday in what has become a
widely publicized case, illustrating the Obama Administration's
aggressive federal enforcement policies in medical marijuana states.
Supporters of Williams organized a 3,300-mile bus caravan, called
"Journey for Justice," which started out in Los Angeles, picking up
people in San Francisco and Portland, and is expected to arrive in
Missoula today. Williams, convicted of 8 felonies in a September
trial, was facing more than 80 years of mandatory minimums before
being offered a rare post-trial plea deal in exchange for his
promise not to appeal his conviction. Williams is now facing 5 years
to life in federal prison.
What: Sentencing hearing for Montana cultivator
Chris Williams
When: Friday, February 1st at 10am
Where: Russell Smith Federal Courthouse, 201 E. Broadway,
Missoula, before Judge Dana L. Christensen
Williams was arrested with numerous others after aggressive
SWAT-style raids conducted by the Drug Enforcement Administration
(DEA) in March 2011. On a single day, the DEA executed 26 separate
search warrants across Montana, which not only represented a
reversal of the Obama Administration's policy on medical marijuana,
but was also a thinly-veiled attempt to undermine state legislative
efforts aimed at adopting distribution regulations. Soon after the
raids, the Montana legislature passed a bill to completely repeal
its medical marijuana law, which was later vetoed by then-Governor
Schweitzer.
"It's cases like this that make you wonder why the federal
government sees fit to aggressively prosecute medical marijuana
cultivators and distributors in full compliance with state law,"
said Kris Hermes, spokesperson with Americans for Safe Access, the
country's leading medical marijuana advocacy organization. "The
Obama Administration is lying to the American people when it says
it's not targeting individual patients and these cases are clear
evidence of that." Fellow Montana cultivator and medical marijuana
patient Richard Flor died in August while serving out a 5-year
prison sentence after being prosecuted by the Justice Department.
Several medical marijuana cultivators and distributors from Montana
have been convicted and sentenced over the past few months. Richard
Flor's widow, Sherry Flor, was arrested with her husband and is now
serving a 2-year prison sentence. Medical marijuana patient,
cultivator and former University of Montana Grizzlies quarterback
Jason Washington was convicted two weeks ago in federal court of two
felonies, "conspiracy to manufacture and distribute marijuana" and
"possession with intent to distribute marijuana," despite his claims
to be in full compliance with state law. Because federal law does
not recognize medical marijuana as such, defendants like Williams
and Washington are denied a defense in federal court. Washington is
facing up to 40 years in prison, and more than $10 million in fines
and forfeitures.
Support for Williams began long before the Journey for Justice bus
caravan set off from Los Angeles, A White House petition requesting
a Presidential Pardon for Williams collected nearly 30,000
signatures last year, but the Obama Administration refused to
comment on the case. The case against Williams drew the attention of
Emmy Award nominated filmmaker Rebecca Richman Cohen, who is working
on a documentary, "Code of the West," which covers the story of
Williams and others caught up in the Obama Administration's attacks
on medical marijuana.
Far surpassing his predecessor George W. Bush, President Obama has
conducted more than 200 SWAT-style raids on state-compliant medical
marijuana businesses and has indicted more than 80 people since he
took office. "How many medical marijuana patients is President Obama
going to imprison before he considers other, more humane options,"
said Hermes. "The president must answer for why he's going against
his earlier pledges by spending Justice Department funds in this
way."
Further information:
Support Chris Williams page:
http://www.codeofthewestfilm.com
Journey for Justice page:
http://the-human-solution.org/journey-for-justice
Code of the West website:
http://www.codeofthewestfilm.com
# # #