"Orange County is willing
to use incarceration as a means to prevent Marvin
from educating people about medical marijuana."
-- Orange County Weekly Quoting Chavezs Attorney
(Marijuananews note: The Orange County Weekly is
as blunt as the Orange County Register in deploring the war on medical marijuana users.
This may be having an effect, but it has been too late to stop the prosecution of those
already arrested.)See
Orange County Weekly
Names Marvin Chavez Man Of The Year
February 4, 1999
From The Orange County Weekly
letters@ocweekly.com
http://www.ocweekly.com/
By Nick Schou
CRIMINAL PROSECUTION BODY COUNT GROWS IN WAR ON MEDICAL MARIJUANA
Like the enigmatic psycho killer in the penultimate act of a hackneyed horror flick-the
maniac who mysteriously returns to life as soon as the hero turns his back-Orange
Countys war on medical marijuana just wont die. It dispatched its latest
victim with stunning severity on Jan. 29. To perform the honors, distinguished former
county prosecutor Carl Armbrust took a break from his retirement to attend the sentencing
of Marvin Chavez, the medical-marijuana activist convicted last November of selling
marijuana to undercover cops.
That afternoon, Judge Thomas J. Borris sentenced Chavez to six years in jail, a
punishment that stemmed from an undercover operation directed by Armbrusts
anti-narcotics task force against Chavezs Orange County Patient-Doctor-Nurse Support
Group. As he exited Orange Countys West Municipal courtroom in handcuffs, Chavez
looked to his defense attorney, Jim Silva, and said forgivingly, "Thats all
right." Silva couldnt help but think of the old cliche about Orange County that
ought to be reserved for history books and not newspaper articles: "Behind the Orange
Curtain."
"I wasnt sure what that phrase meant until today," said Silva, who
lives in Venice, during a Jan. 29 interview. "Judge
Borris decision took me completely off-guard. It may change the whole political
landscape. Marvin only provided marijuana to patients or to undercover cops pretending to
be patients. But Judge Borris didnt even consider that as a mitigating factor in his
sentencing."
Almost as disturbing as Borris sentence, Silva said, was the 30-page probation
report used in Fridays hearing. Among other considerations, such as the two previous
narcotics-related felonies on Chavezs record, the report noted, "Mr. Chavez
says he would continue to travel around the state and educate people about
medical marijuana."
"The report makes it abundantly clear they dont want Marvin to exercise his
rights to free speech," concluded Silva. "Orange County is
willing to use incarceration as a means to prevent Marvin from educating people about
medical marijuana. That is exactly the kind of thing that First Amendment
[advocates] would find repugnant."
Silva isnt alone in his feelings about the current state of justice in Orange
County. In fact, many observers to the drama that unfolded toward the end of Chavezs
high-profile trial found themselves struggling to comprehend the harshness of his prison
sentence. On Jan. 31, The Orange County Register, which had
previously both criticized and praised Borris for the fairness of his courtroom rulings,
lambasted Chavezs sentence as "near criminal."
See
Chavez Sentenced To
Six Years For Medical Marijuana; Appeal To Follow;
Orange County Register Calls Sentence "Criminal" -- 2 Editorials
"This is the battleground," declared Mike Vardoulis, vice president of the OC
Hemp Council. "Orange County, for whatever reason, wants to display the least amount
of sympathy to medical marijuana users. Its open season." Vardoulis claimed
that sending activists like Chavez to jail is part of a silent conspiracy by government
officials to cover up the medicinal benefits of cannabis. "Its gotten pretty
obvious," said Vardoulis. "So many people have been arrested, sent to jail, and
are being denied access to their medication."
Chavez isnt the only casualty of Californias ongoing war on medical
marijuana-just the latest. On Jan. 19, just 10 days before Chavez was sent to prison,
police in northern California arrested Steve Kubby, who last year ran unsuccessfully for
California governor on the Libertarian Party ticket. Arrested at their home near Lake
Tahoe, both Kubby and his wife were charged with cultivation and possession of marijuana
plants, despite the fact that Kubby, one of the original authors of Proposition 215,
carries a doctors note permitting him to grow and smoke the drug.
See
After Interview With
Steve Kubby, Orange County Weekly Says
Arresting Him "May Have Been Prop 215 Opponents' Worst Mistake"
and
Evidence In Kubby
Case Obtained Through Bedroom Surveillance;
Narcs Observed And Videotaped Kubbys Having Sex
Last year, David Herrick, a former San Bernardino County sheriffs deputy,
received a four-year prison sentence after being convicted of several of the same charges
that later were used by OC prosecutors against Chavez. Herrick, who suffers from a back
injury, is now being held at Salinas Valley State Prison in Soledad, where he is
reportedly being denied access to his medication. He is also being denied visits-or
interviews-from reporters. Herricks appeal is scheduled to begin next month.
See
More On the
Injustice of the David Herrick Case
and links
Meanwhile, the wheels of Orange County justice grind on. Of the three individuals who
risked their liberty to help sick Californians obtain their legal medicine, two are now
behind bars. On Feb. 3 the trial of the third and final founding member of Orange
Countys now-defunct Patient-Doctor-Nurse-Support-Group, Jack Schachter, began at the
West Municipal Court in Westminster.
Like that of Marvin Chavez, Schachters case stems from
Armbrusts undercover operation, which relied on police officers posing as sick
patients with doctors notes to trick Chavez into "dealing" baggies of
marijuana marked "Not for Sale-For Medicinal Use Only." If convicted, Schachter
faces a maximum sentence of several years in a state penitentiary.
Copyright: 1999, Orange County Weekly, Inc.