|
We Update
Daily!
Custom Search
Chris S. Kenoyer. Owner
MMJ Patient,
Medical Activist,
Online Patients Advocate,
Online News Journalist
My
Personal Medical Bio
Follow Us Now On Twitter
@MedicalMMJMan
Email Us Here
olpwebs@yahoo.com
Or Email Me 100% Securely Below
MedicalMMJMan@countermail.com
NEW 100% Encrypted Email Server
For
TV,
News, Press, Contact Info
Is CBD? A Possible
Cure For
Breast Cancer..?
And All The Other
Many
Forms & Types
Of Cancer..?
Learn
More About " CBD" Here
Cancer Cured..? A Cannabis Story
********************************
Advertise Here
On OnlinePot
Rates As Low As $50 a Year
24/7 - 365 Days A Year
Of Sales!
*******************************************
Website Navigational Links
Main
Start Page 2
*******************************************
Parody's
Cartoons US
Government Grown Pot,
Term Papers,
School
Reports, & Thesis's On
Marijuana & Cannabis
*******************************************
Amsterdam
A to Z
*******************************************
Canadian
Marijuana
Websites
*******************************************
Church's
& Pot Cannabis
*******************************************
Co-Ops, Clinics, Dispensary's
*********************************************
Marijuana
Doctors & Clinics
*******************************************
Pot
Cooking Recipes
*******************************************
Drug
Testing A To Z
*******************************************
Pot Games
*********************************************
Pot
Songs
*******************************************
100's
Of Grow Guides
*******************************************
Latest
Marijuana News Reports
*******************************************
Hash A- Z
*******************************************
Cannabis
Legal Info, Drug
Lawyers, State, Federal Laws,
State
& Supreme Court Rulings
*******************************************
POW's
Of The MMJ
War!
*******************************************
Other
Marijuana Websites
Websites
Link
Exchange!
*******************************************
Medical
Marijuana
Studies,
Research
Report's, Medical
Cannabis Clinic Study's
*******************************************
Avoiding Online MOM
Scammers
Newly
Re-Updated Info!
*******************************************
The Politics Of
Contraband
Medical Marijuana In The Mail?
*******************************************
The
Hall Of Shame Section
The Online MOM Scammers
*******************************************
Online
MOM Providers Ads
*******************************************
Politicians
&
Voters Rights
*******************************************
Medical
Marijuana, Strains
*******************************************
The OG
Marijuana Strain Guide
*******************************************
800+
FAQ Growing Questions
*******************************************
Patients
Spiritual
Guidance,
Free Online
Crisis Help Center
*******************************************
Online
Marijuana Seed Banks
*******************************************
Maximum Security
Section
Just Updated!
*******************************************
Traveling
Tips, Guides, B & B's
*******************************************
Vaporizers
A To Z
*******************************************
Online Pot Video's & Movies
*******************************************
Please
Visit Our Sister Website!
Reefer Madness Teaching
Museum.org
Listen Right Here Online!
To Original 1930-1950's
Reefer Madness Propaganda
Radio
Shows And Programs
Before TV There Were
"Radio Stars"
*********************************
OnlinePot Free Newsletter
The
Latest In MMJ News
Legal
Disclaimer
Guest Book
Translate Text or Web Page Go To:
Language Tools
Google
Translations
Article
Submissions & News
Reports
Are Always
Gladly
Accepted Here.

1999-2012 Copyright ©
All Rights Reserved.
No part of this site maybe used or
reproduced in whole or in part
without
the written consent of the
Copyright
Owner Chris Kenoyer
www.onlinepot.org
OnlinePot assumes no legal
liability
for
any products, or
information or
news
posted, services
offered,
Or
any contests or give away's offered.
| |
Search and Seizure: Medical-marijuana raids are big
business for local cops and the feds.
Return To OnlinePot's
Legal Section Main Page
Courts call it asset forfeiture. Critics call it robbery. Either way, local and
federal law-enforcement agencies will likely get to keep any cash,
computers,
cars, or real estate seized during last week's highly publicized
raids on
medical-marijuana dispensaries.
According to the Department of Justice website, asset forfeiture "enhances
public safety and security . . . [by] removing the proceeds of crime and other
assets relied upon by criminals and their associates to perpetuate their
criminal activity against our society." Translation: If you sell drugs (or
do anything else illegal), prosecutors can take your money, anything bought
using that money, and anything used to make that money. For example, if you
drive your car to a drug deal and get busted, odds are that car will eventually
become the property of the law-enforcement agency that caught you. And in some
cases, they don't even have to arrest you to get away with it.
Last year, federal law-enforcement agencies netted nearly $4 billion through
asset forfeiture, including $19.6 million in western Washington.
Legal experts and pot activists say that in recent months, the asset-forfeiture
process has been used by federal prosecutors and law-enforcement agents as a
means of muscling dispensary owners in California,
Montana, and eastern
Washington out of business. Kris Hermes, spokesman for Americans for Safe
Access, a national medical-marijuana advocacy group, has accused federal agents
essentially of looting.
"Literally, federal agents will come to a place and break down the
door," Hermes says. "They'll trash various pieces of property, take
computers, take growing equipment if that's going on, take plants and money,
take patient records that are supposed to be private. They may not arrest
anybody or indict anybody, but that's sending a message of intimidation."
Adds Alison Holcomb, drug-policy director for the local ACLU chapter and
campaign director for New Approach Washington, the anticipated ballot initiative
that would legalize marijuana: "The term that has been coined is 'smash and
grab.' It's basically the bank robber, the jewelry thief, whatever—they use
the same lingo . . . From a law-enforcement perspective, presumably what they
think they're doing is discouraging people from doing this by hitting their
bottom line and taking assets."
Ten dispensaries in the Puget
Sound area were raided on
Tuesday, Nov. 15, part of a federal crackdown on operations which failed
to "comply with the letter and the spirit of existing state law" and
violated federal law simply by selling weed. DEA agents had warrants to search
at least 16 properties and 11 cars, including a 1977 Corvette and a 2007
Mercedes. It is possible that these items could be seized through forfeiture.
Whether that will actually happen remains to be seen.
Unlike in criminal cases, where prosecutors have to prove guilt "beyond a
reasonable doubt," federal forfeiture proceedings require only "a
preponderance of evidence" that connects personal property to a criminal
enterprise. Hearsay evidence—for example, testimony from a federal agent who
says a paid informant told him that a car or home had figured in a drug
transaction—can be used to justify forfeiture, even though it would likely be
inadmissible in a criminal case, says Eapen Thampy, co-founder of the nonprofit
Americans for Forfeiture Reform.
Local cops get a cut of the proceeds when they help their federal counterparts
execute a drug bust. In some cases, local police take up to 80 percent of the
cash and property seized. The result, Thampy says, is that even in areas where
law enforcement is scaling back because of budget cuts, marijuana remains a
priority because of its potential to boost the budget.
"They see the revenue potential in these
raids," Thampy says. "In areas like Seattle,
local law enforcement might not have any appetite for this because of the
political climate. But these guys in Tacoma,
they might see it as a one-time cash grab. As long as it doesn't happen too
often, they can say, 'We thought this raid was something necessary, that these
guys were trafficking something else or that some actual laws were being
broken.' "
Several local narcotics task forces participated in the Nov.
15 raids. Deputy Scott Wilson, spokesman for the West
Sound Narcotics Enforcement Team, wasn't sure whether his agency would
receive federal forfeiture funds in exchange for its assistance serving a search
warrant at a dispensary in Kitsap
County. "It's not something they divvy up straight away,"
Wilson says. "It goes through a whole asset-forfeiture hearing and all
that. We only supplied a handful of operatives, and if it's based on a prorated
share, I'd say our amount would be very little."
Thus far, no dispensary owners or employees have been indicted or charged with a
crime in connection with the Nov. 15 raids. Steven Kessler, a New York–based
attorney and expert on asset forfeiture, says that is not unusual. "It's
now almost become something where you can't arrest people because you know when
they go to trial, no one is going to convict them," Kessler says. "So
you say 'OK, let's make things miserable for them and take their property and
cash and the like.' "
But Emily Langlie, spokesperson for the Western Washington U.S. Attorney's
Office, strongly denies that's the case in Seattle.
"If that were the strategy, we could have gone after all the dispensaries,
because they're all illegal under federal law—but we didn't," she says.
"I think we've been really clear that these operations were targeted
because they were flagrantly violating not only federal law, but state
law."
By Keegan Hamilton
Wednesday, Nov 23 2011
http://www.seattleweekly.com/2011-11-23/news/search-and-seizure/
|