Obama Administration Throwing Medical Marijuana Patients Into Federal Prison at Unprecedented Rate
This month will see a number of patients sentenced, sent to prison despite compliance with state medical marijuana lawsWashington, DC -- Fallout from the Obama Administration's
aggressive federal enforcement in medical marijuana states has
reached a fever pitch this month with three people being sentenced,
two others due to surrender to federal authorities to serve out
sentences of up to five years in prison, and one federal trial in
Montana currently scheduled for January 14th. Two of the three
people being sentenced in the coming month -- Montana cultivator
Chris Williams and Los Angeles-area dispensary operator Aaron
Sandusky -- face five and ten years to life, respectively.
"The number of sick patients being locked up by the Obama
Administration is unprecedented and deplorable," said Kris Hermes,
spokesperson for Americans for Safe Access, the country's leading
medical marijuana advocacy organization. "Aggressive enforcement is
an unacceptable means of addressing medical marijuana as a public
health issue," continued Hermes. "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." Montana
patient cultivator Richard Flor died in August while serving out a
5-year prison sentence.
Five cultivators claiming to be in compliance with Michigan's
medical marijuana law were sentenced in October. Two of the
cultivators -- Jaycob Montague and Jeremy Duval -- are already
serving their prison terms of 18 months and 5 years, respectively,
and two others -- John Marcinkewciz and Shelley Waldron -- are
scheduled to surrender to federal authorities on January 8th and
10th, respectively. Waldron will be imprisoned for 18 months and
Marcinkewciz for 5 years. The fifth cultivator, Jerry Duval
(Jeremy's father), was sentenced to 10 years, but has not yet been
given a surrender date.
More than a dozen people were indicted after federal agents
conducted raids on state compliant medical marijuana businesses
throughout Montana in March 2011. Only one, Chris Williams, went to
trial and, like all other medical marijuana defendants who are tried
in federal court, was denied a defense and swiftly convicted. While
facing more than 80 years of mandatory minimum sentencing, Williams
accepted a rare post-conviction plea deal that reduced his charges
and possible sentence to 5 years to life in exchange for his promise
not to appeal his conviction. Williams, who is scheduled to be
sentenced on February 1st, worked at Montana Cannabis with Chris
Lindsey, another indicted cultivator. Lindsey, who testified against
Williams at his trial, is expected to be sentenced today. Medical
marijuana cultivator Jason Washington has one of the last unresolved
federal cases in Montana. Washington is currently scheduled to go to
trial on January 14th.
Aaron Sandusky operated G3 Holistic in Upland, California when he
was federally indicted in June. Though Sandusky was arrested with
several others, he was the only one who took his case to trial. In
October, Sandusky was denied a defense in federal court and
convicted at trial. He is scheduled to be sentenced on January 7th
to a minimum of 10 years to life.
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?"
asked Hermes. "The president must answer for why he's going against
his earlier pledges by spending Justice Department funds in this
way, especially at a time of fiscal crisis."