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US: Feds just say no to judge's advice, decide they'll retry 'guru

Bob Egelko, Chronicle Staff Writer

San Francisco Chronicle

Saturday 14 Apr 2007

---
Federal prosecutors brushed off a judge's suggestion that they not retry
a prominent marijuana advocate on cultivation charges and said Friday
they would press ahead, even though he cannot be sent to prison if he is
convicted.

Assistant U.S. Attorney George Bevan made the announcement at a hearing
in San Francisco before U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer, who presided
over the first trial of 62-year-old Ed Rosenthal of Oakland. When Bevan
said last month that the government intended to retry the self-described
"guru of ganja," Breyer urged him to reconsider, suggesting that federal
resources might be used more productively in prosecutions that result in
imprisonment.

Bevan said Friday that prosecutors had reached their decision after a
"thorough and careful review'' and that the final word had come from
Scott Schools, the interim U.S. attorney in San Francisco. When Breyer
asked if Justice Department officials in Washington had been consulted,
Bevan said he didn't know.

The retrial, scheduled to begin May 14, will be limited to the
cultivation charges of which Rosenthal was convicted in 2003, verdicts
that were overturned on appeal last year. Prosecutors have said they
would not seek additional imprisonment for Rosenthal, beyond the one day
in jail he has already served, if he were convicted again.

Rosenthal was arrested for growing marijuana that he said was intended
for medical patients. After he won his appeal on grounds of juror
misconduct, prosecutors secured a new federal grand jury indictment in
October that included additional charges of tax evasion and
money-laundering related to his marijuana cultivation.

The new charges could have resulted in a prison sentence of 20 years,
but Breyer dismissed them last month, saying they had been added
vindictively in retaliation for Rosenthal's successful appeal and his
public statements disputing the fairness of his trial.

Bevan said Friday that his office would not appeal Breyer's ruling.

After the hearing, defense lawyers criticized the retrial decision. But
Rosenthal's response was: Bring it on.

"This isn't a criminal case. This is a political case," said Rosenthal,
wearing a shiny green robe embroidered with images of marijuana leaves.
"When I win this case, it's saying to the government, 'You have to stop
harassing the medical (marijuana) dispensaries.' "

Defense lawyer Shari Greenberger said she would ask Breyer to order the
government to reimburse Rosenthal for the time his lawyers spent getting
the new charges dismissed. Virginia Resner, president of a group called
Green Aid, which is raising money for Rosenthal's defense, said
preparation for the new trial has already cost $180,000.

Rosenthal is an authority on marijuana cultivation. His latest book was
"Why Marijuana Should Be Legal."

His first trial was the first and most prominent of several federal
prosecutions of growers who were providing cannabis under a 1996 state
initiative that allowed patients to use the drug with a doctor's approval.

Breyer barred evidence about medical marijuana during the trial, saying
it was irrelevant to a prosecution under federal drug laws. After a jury
convicted Rosenthal of three counts, however, the judge imposed a token
one-day sentence rather than the five years prescribed by federal
guidelines. Breyer said Rosenthal had believed he was acting legally
because the city of Oakland had designated him as an official in its
medical marijuana distribution program.

A federal appeals court overturned the convictions last year, finding
misconduct by a juror who consulted a lawyer during deliberations. The
court also indicated that it would have rejected prosecutors' appeal of
the one-day sentence even if it had upheld the convictions.

This article appeared on page A - 1 of the San Francisco Chronicle.
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/04/14/GURU.TMP

 

 

 

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