Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.

US: Jurors Denounce Their Own Verdict

Ann Harrison

AlterNet.org

Monday 03 Feb 2003

---

After she and her fellow jurors found Ed Rosenthal guilty of federal
marijuana cultivation and conspiracy charges in San Francisco last week,
Marney Craig discovered that that she had made a terrible mistake.

Instead of the "businessman" she thought she had convicted, Craig
learned that Rosenthal, was, in fact, a widely published marijuana
advocate who had been asked to grow medical cannabis for critically ill
patients. The judge had kept this information from jurors, because
Rosenthal was tried under federal drug laws that do not recognize the
medicinal use of marijuana.

"What happened was a travesty and it's unbelievable, unbelievable that
this man was convicted. I am just devastated," said Craig. "We made a
terrible mistake and he should not be going to prison for this."

Craig is not alone in her remorse. Five other jurors, including the jury
foreman, are expected to join Craig to denounce the verdict in a joint
press conference this week. The event will take place immediately after
a hearing to determine whether prosecutors will succeed in revoking
Rosenthal's $200,000 cash bond and send him to jail until sentencing on
June 4. Attorneys for Rosenthal, who is facing five to 20 years in
prison, say they will ask an appeals court for a new trial.

"I was not allowed to tell my story," said Rosenthal. "If the jury had
been allowed to hear the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, I would
have been acquitted."

Juror Debra DeMartini said she was distressed to discover that Rosenthal
had been deputized by the city of Oakland, California to grow marijuana
for its medical cannabis program. Oakland city officials testified
during pre-trail hearings that they had tried to reconcile the conflict
between the federal Controlled Substances Act, which bans all marijuana
cultivation, and California's Compassionate Use Act (Prop. 215) which
permits patients to possess, consume and grow their own medical
cannabis.

In an effort to provide medical cannabis to patients who could not grow
their own, the city granted Rosenthal immunity from prosecution under a
section of the Controlled Substances Act. But U.S. District Judge
Charles Breyer halted every attempt by the defense team to directly tell
jurors for whom Rosenthal's marijuana was being grown and blocked city
officials from explaining Rosenthal's deputization during the trial.

"If I had known that he was told he could grow this by the city, that
would have raised some questions for me in front of the judge," said
DeMartini. "It's a waste of taxpayer money to bring these cases and
prosecute people."

Craig sobbed as she recounted her growing concern during the trial that
Judge Breyer was withholding critical information. Craig said she became
alarmed when the judge took over questioning of the witnesses, when he
repeatedly cut off the defense attorney, and when she saw protest signs
in front of the courthouse suggesting that jurors were not fully
informed.

"The more information we get, the more we realize how manipulated and
controlled the whole situation was, and that we were pawns in this much
larger game," says Craig. "As residents, we voted to legalize medical
marijuana and now we are forced to sit here and not take any of this
into consideration?

"In some sense it is a major setback, and in another it is a call to
arms,"said Jeff Jones, executive director of the Oakland Cannabis
Buyers' Cooperative, one of the medical marijuana clubs that Rosenthal
was growing for.

Rosenthal's trail was attended by a number of medical marijuana
patients, many of whom wept when the verdict was announced. Nicholas
Feldman, a quadrapalegic cerebral palsy patient who says he smokes
medical cannabis to ease the pain and spasticity in his limbs, was one
of several people who arrived in court in a wheelchair. "How can they do
this to us? People are in pain and it means a lot to us as citizens not
to see a person suffer." said Feldman. "I stand here to day for people
who could end up in jail for helping to ease my pain."

Despite the emotion surrounding the case, some jurors felt that they had
no choice but to follow judge Rosenthal's instructions, based on the
evidence in front of them. DEA agents testified that they seized
thousands of marijuana plants and cuttings at a San Francisco medical
marijuana club, and at an Oakland warehouse owned by Rosenthal. But
jurors said they distrusted the testimony and based their convictions on
video tapes of the marijuana grow sites. They found that Rosenthal
conspired with others at the club to to grow not more than 1,000
marijuana plants, as the prosecutor claimed, but more than 100 marijuana
plants, a fact which will affect Rosenthal's sentencing. Jurors also
found him guilty of growing more than 100 plants at the warehouse and
maintaining a place to grow marijuana.

Shortly after the verdict was read, juror Bill Zemke walked solemnly
from the courthouse past past two medical marijuana patients who sat
weeping. "We considered the evidence in the case, the evidence that we
could review, it was not an easy decision," said Zemke evenly. [Medical
cannabis] was in the back of everyone's mind, a factor in the case, but
it was not in the evidence in this case."

"We have state's rights," shouted the disconsolate patient, "you can't
lock all of us up."

Jurors Have Power But Not The City

Jury foreman Charles Sackett agreed with Zemke that jurors came to the
only conclusion that they could have, given the information they were
provided. But he said he supports medical marijuana and hopes Rosenthal
will win his appeal. "The medical issue was not introduced into the
court proceedings, it was never an issue for us," said Sackett. "We
weren't allowed to discuss it amongst ourselves, ever."

Sackett says he's now intrigued by the idea of jury nullification, which
he says none of the jurors was aware of. Jury nullification is a legal
principal which allows the jury to find a defendant innocent if the law
itself is unjust or unjust in a particular application. Would jurors
have taken the option of jury nullification in Rosenthal's case? "It
would be speculation on my part, but it's very possible; dare I say,
probable," says Sackett. "I think jury nullification is going to be part
of the answer regarding states' rights in future cases."

Down at San Francisco City Hall, Matt Gonzalez, president of the city's
Board of Supervisors, or city council, said jurors in cases like
Rosenthal's should know that they can simply refuse to follow federal
law. "The judge is not giving the jury any space, whatsoever, to engage
in what has been an extremely long tradition in common law as it relates
to jury nullification," said Gonzalez.

Craig said she believed that if she had taken a stand during
deliberations and said the federal law was wrong, she would have been
removed from the jury. "I didn't know what would happen to us if we
didn't follow the rules, how much trouble I would get into," said Craig.
"I was totally intimidated into going along with the verdict because I
didn't see any other way."

San Francisco public defender Jeff Adachi noted that there have been a
number of decisions involving jury nullification in which judges have
removed jurors who have refused to convict. But he said a jury
instruction that permitted this was ruled to be unconstitutional in the
last year. "Over the past 20 years, there has been a movement to limit
the power of the jury by keeping the jury ignorant of the facts," said
Adachi. "Jury nullification is a constitutional right that every
individual person who is called for jury duty possesses, and unless we
appreciate that right, we will lose it because the courts will take it
from us."

In the meantime, Adachi warned that Rosenthal's conviction will
encourage federal authorities to arrest more medical cannabis growers
and distributors. "The kind of prosecution that we are seeing in the
Rosenthal case could be multiplied 50 or 100 times over in the next year
or two here," said Adachi.

Despite the warning of coming prosecutions, Rosenthal's attorney Bill
Simpich noted that city officials were absent during Rosenthal's trial.
While Prop. 215 passed by 78 percent in San Francisco, he said officials
have been slow to comply with a recent ballot initiative ordering them
to investigate a city-run medical cannabis growing and distribution
system.

"'The single biggest thing that hurt us is that we did not have the
cities of San Francisco and Oakland by our side," said Simpich. "They
were not there and if they had been there we would have won. They made a
mistake and the time to correct it is now."

Simpich is calling for California cities and counties to continue
immunizing medical cannabis caregivers because the judge's condemnation
of this tactic applies only to those cases in front of him. "I'd love to
get deputized," said Bob Martin, proprietor of the San Francisco's
Compassion and Care Center medical marijuana club. "We are scared every
day."

Gonzales says he is still meeting with officials and legal advisers to
review the city's options. DEA spokesman Richard Meyer has made it clear
that any San Francisco city authority involved growing or distributing
medical marijuana will be subject to arrest and property forfeiture.

Craig said she upheld federal law and convicted Rosenthal because she
felt she didn't have any choice. But she says that following
instructions was no excuse for not acting on her conscience and refusing
to convict a medical marijuana grower. "Anyone who said I was just
following orders ... well yeah, we just wiped out this village in Viet
Nam, we were just following orders, or the Europeans turning away when
the Jews were taken away by the Nazis. We are no better than that if we
can't take a stand for what we believe in," said Craig.

"I feel like if I had done something in this trial, even if I had been
thrown off the jury, it would have made a difference because it would
have been on the record that someone said 'No,' and that is something I
have to live with."


 

 

 

After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.




This page was created by the Cannabis Campaigners' Guide.
Feel free to link to this page!