Menu Content/Inhalt
Home arrow What The Crap? arrow Man in Wheelchair Faces Possible Federal Drug Charges After Raid

Help Us By Visiting

Man in Wheelchair Faces Possible Federal Drug Charges After Raid PDF Print E-mail
User Rating: / 1
PoorBest 
Written by Brenda Shoop   
Wednesday, 29 August 2007

Here's another example of your hard-earned tax dollars at work!
I just don't understand the logic behind all of this. The guy has a prescription, he's in a freakin' wheelchair, and the Feds bust into his home, take his medicine, and leave. Why? What good can come from that?Look Out for Me, Senator Fatty-Pants!

The Feds even go so far as to claim that they didn't know about his status as a medical marijuana patient until after they left. COULD THEY NOT SEE THAT THE GUY WAS IN A WHEELCHAIR?????

I can just hear Senator Fatty-Pants saying something like this, "Well, you know, if this man has these illicit substances in his home, that fact opens him up to robbery, which then gets the "drug" out onto the street and into our children's hands. Blah, Blah, Blah."

So I guess the message here is that the person in pain must be punished for future alleged burglary committed by future alleged criminals who may or may not sell drugs to future alleged children. Yeah, that really makes me want to jump up and kiss the flag.

So what DID happen? Government thieves came in and stole his medicine.  And now they're not even charging him with a crime yet. But I'll bet he doesn't get his stuff back. Or by the time he does, it's useless because plants need water and sunlight and I seriously doubt that anyone at the evidence locker is concerned with that. Official Government Thieves.

But, you see, that's the way it goes in these cases. The Feds come in, take your stuff, and dare you to try to get it back, saying that they will charge you with a crime if you even try. That's how sick people get their medicine stolen from them everyday in this country. AND THAT'S JUST PLAIN WRONG!!

So read the story and stand back as the drama unfolds in New Mexico. 

MALAGA, N.M. -- Agents with a regional drug task force raided Leonard French's home in southeastern New Mexico on Tuesday and seized several marijuana plants.

But the wheelchair-bound man said he's certified by the state Health Department to possess and smoke marijuana for medical reasons. The 44-year-old lost the use of his legs about 20 years ago as the result of a motorcycle crash and now suffers from chronic pain and muscle spasms.

French allowed the agents into his home in Malaga, just north of the New Mexico-Texas border, because he said he believed he was doing nothing wrong. He had worked with his doctor and the state to get permission to have marijuana.

"I'm kind of stuck between a rock and a hard place," he told Albuquerque television station KOB-TV on Tuesday. "It makes me feel like the state says, 'Here you go. Here's your license to drive,' and the first time I left the driveway, they took my car away."

While no charges have been filed against French, the Pecos Valley Drug Task Force said federal drug charges are possible.

Allan Oliver, a spokesman for Gov. Bill Richardson, said authorities targeting a paraplegic man suffering from a spinal cord injury is "a policy without compassion."

"As long as Mr. French was within the limits of the medical marijuana state law, we urge the (Drug Enforcement Administration) not to prosecute him," Oliver said late Tuesday. "U.S. attorneys have their hands full with real drug cases and border violations, and can't afford to waste taxpayer dollars to prosecute individuals who are critically ill or suffering from debilitating conditions."

The task force stated in a news release that agents did not know French had state permission to use marijuana until after the raid.

Deborah Busemeyer, a spokeswoman for the New Mexico Department of Health, confirmed that officers called the agency after the raid to verify the man's state-issued marijuana identification card. Each card has the department's telephone number and a special code.

"This is a sad story because we want patients who need medical marijuana to have it," she said. "A lot of these people have chronic pain and other illnesses, and this is their only relief."

A state law that took effect this summer allows the use of marijuana for pain or other symptoms of debilitating illnesses such as cancer, glaucoma, epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, HIV-AIDS and certain spinal cord injuries.

The department has been certifying patients as eligible to possess marijuana. That protects the individuals from state prosecution, but leaves them to find their own supply of marijuana -- potentially growing it themselves or obtaining it from friends or drug dealers.

Busemeyer said 38 patients have been approved to participate in the program since the law took effect July 1.

She stressed the state law does not protect those in the program from federal prosecution.

"Some patients are nervous about federal prosecution," she said. "Other states (with medical marijuana laws) have experienced that federal agencies haven't gone after patients. But again, we can't provide protection against federal law."

New Mexico is the 12th state to legalize marijuana for certain medical uses, but it's the only one where the law calls for state-licensed production and distribution of the drug.

The department announced earlier this month that it would not implement the law's provisions for the agency to oversee the production and distribution of marijuana to eligible patients because of concerns over the potential for federal prosecution against state employees.

Richardson, who is running for the Democratic presidential nomination, has ordered the department to resume planning for a medical marijuana program, and a public hearing on the matter is planned this fall.

French is apparently not the first person in the state's medical marijuana program to catch the attention of law enforcement. Busemeyer said a similar incident occurred recently in another part of the state, but she could not provide details.

Law enforcement agencies have asked the department if it could inform them about patients who are certified to have marijuana, but Busemeyer said doing so would violate federal patient privacy laws.

Newshawk: LTE How-To www.safeaccessnow.org/article.php?id=310
Pubdate: Wed, 29 Aug 2007
Source: New Mexican, The (Santa Fe, NM)
Copyright: 2007 The Associated Press
Contact: http://www.freenewmexican.com/emailforms/letters.php
Website: http://www.freenewmexican.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/695
Author: Associated Press
Cited: New Mexico Department of Health http://www.nmhealth.org/marijuana.html
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?232 (Chronic Pain)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Bill+Richardson

Last Updated ( Thursday, 13 September 2007 )
 
< Prev   Next >

Get GEM Merchandise at CafePress

Support This Site

Every Click Helps!

Alexa Stats and Page Rank

created by: Max
This is my Google PageRank™ - SmE Rank free service Powered by Scriptme