Well whaddaya know?

GregS

Well-Known Member
We won a round.

By Carol Hopkins, The Oakland Press
Posted: 12/17/13, 2:25 PM EST | Updated: 19 secs ago


Earl Carruthers, 28, of Ferndale, had pot charges for possession as a medical marijuana patient dismissed by Judge Phyllis McMillen yesterday, pictured at his TV Fitness gym Tuesday December 17, 2013. (Vaughn Gurganian-The Oakland Press)

Medical marijuana advocates are applauding news that charges against a Ferndale medical marijuana patient charged with marijuana possession and delivery have been dropped.

Earl Carruthers, 28, and five others, including his brother Ryan, faced six counts after an Oakland County narcotics law enforcement team raid at the Southfield-based Green and Greener Grow Collective dispensary on Jan. 4, 2012.

The charges against Carruthers and the others involved money laundering, conspiracy to deliver marijuana, three counts of delivery of marijuana, and possession with intent to deliver, all felonies ranging in penalties of four to five years.

The decision Monday Dec. 16 in Oakland County Circuit Court brought a “big relief, a big weight was lifted off my shoulders,” said Carruthers, who praised his attorneys and the judge in the case, Phyllis McMillen.

Carruthers said the arrest changed his life.

“I ended up losing (a financial business) and just tried to keep my head above water,” he said. He and his brother have since opened TV Fitness gym in Ferndale.

Carruthers’ attorney, Michael Komorn, said Carruthers, a former Wayne State University football player who cracked his pelvis playing football in 2001, became a medical marijuana patient as a result of the pain.

(NOTE: Carruthers has another case where the Michigan Court of Appeals ruled edible marijuana is not protected by the state’s Medical Marijuana Act, approved in 2008. That case has been appealed to the state Supreme Court.)

Komorn said when McMillen announced her decision, defendants were ecstatic.

“There was hugging and high-fiving,” said Komorn.

“It was joy, the sweet sounds of justice.”

Komorn said several patients who testified about the process at Green and Greener were the key to the defense.

“People queued up to tell their stories,” said Komorn.

“They spoke about how they were benefiting (from the dispensary).”

Defense attorneys, who included Jim Amberg and David Rudoi, explained what transpired. Paul Walton with the Oakland County Prosecutor’s Office staff said they will appeal the order.

Komorn said at Green and Greener, patients had to sign a membership agreement saying they promised to comply with the act and certified they were a patient with valid documents.

The undercover officer went to the dispensary as a patient.

Komorn said the police used “forged physician’s certification, fake driver’s license, fake cashed check from the state of Michigan showing the state had received (an medical marijuana card) application — paperwork saying he had a valid card.”

Komorn said entrapment became a central point in the defense.

“With entrapment cases, we don’t want a government’s action to create a crime,” he said.

Defense attorneys argued the transfer of medical marijuana was not to a real patient.

“If you create a fake prescription, you don’t blame the pharmacist (for filling it) and they don’t get charged,” said Komorn.

Caregivers reviewing documents should have something to rely on, attorneys argued.

Rick Thompson, editor of The Compassion Chronicles, said of the decision represented progress.

“Patients in Oakland County have been under a crushing weight for years -- more than in any other Michigan county. Many cases involve individuals and small businesses who were acting under the impression that they were following the law,” he said.

“If this decision changes law enforcement’s behavior -- and the days of unreasonable searches and entrapment techniques are behind us -- perhaps we have turned a corner on this issue.”

Amberg said he is seeing a shift in medical marijuana case decisions since the People vs. Kolanek decision in January, 2011 from the Michigan Supreme Court.

In that decision, the Supreme Court affirmed a Court of Appeals decision that held patients must obtain a physician’s statement after the enactment of the Medical Marijuana Act and before the arrest.

“The (worker) who provided marijuana to the undercover officer was acting lawfully under the act,” said Amberg.

“The only thing arguably that made it not legal was the officer’s own action. He was presenting fictitious documentation to the (dispensary).”

Komorn added, “The crime was created by the government. That is principle of entrapment.”

Carruthers said he was happy, but also felt the moment was bittersweet. He said his faith helped keep him stable through the court process.

The narcotics team “took our cars, trashed our homes. They went to our parents’ home and put guns to my mom’s face,” he said.

He was angry, he said.
“This wasn’t right,” he said. “You have to take a stand.”

Carruthers, who said he changed his mind over the years after learning in 2010 about the benefits of medical marijuana, stated other patients and caregivers have been harassed.

“A lot didn’t have the means to weather the storm. We had to get through the storm and (knowing about other patients) motivated us to keep fighting.

“It’s about every patient and caregiver, not only Oakland County but in the state.

“You can’t try to step on the voters’ opinion. You have to respect patients and caregivers. We want respect.”

Carol Hopkins has a master's degree in journalism from the University of Michigan and worked as a senior editor for Detroit Monthly magazine and as a reporter for The Oakland Press since 2003. Reach the author at [email protected] or follow Carol on Twitter: @OPCarolHopkins.
 

Huel Perkins

Well-Known Member
Just saw this again on facebook, can't help but smile. Now i wish they would go on the offensive and press charges for entrapment.
 

TheMan13

Well-Known Member
:clap: Always glad to hear good news :clap:

Why in such a short article is Komorn's name mentioned (10) times :confused: Any idea how much he has pocketed on this mess thus far? When the game impedes access, we need to take a close look at all the players ;)
 

RenMasters

Member
Just saw this again on facebook, can't help but smile. Now i wish they would go on the offensive and press charges for entrapment.
I agree. Go on the offensive.

Seeing this and the overwhelming majority of yes votes on the bills in the house give me hope. We're living in exciting times for the cannabis movement that's for sure!
 

Corso312

Well-Known Member
I don't understand how these fucks can manufacture false i.d. n doctor scripts without being charged themselves . forget the entrapment...these scumbags are manufacturing fake i.d. n counterfeiting doctor scripts...don't people get arrested n charged with felonies for doing this ? These retarded motherfuckers should lose their badge,job n pension ...then be charged with the above crimes.


the dude may have beaten this case but he should be reimbursed by the state for all the $ he lost n his list buisness.
 

TheMan13

Well-Known Member
Sadly entrapment is simply a defense to criminal liability, an affirmative defense if you will, exactly like that provided under section 8 of our MJ act. The problem here is the problem with lawfare in general: Justice is what you can afford. We will never see a successful entrapment or section 8 defense/precedent until the state chooses to take someone of true means to trial, a very unlikely event IMO.

[video=youtube;oBIxScJ5rlY]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oBIxScJ5rlY[/video]
 

Healenz

Active Member
the dude may have beaten this case but he should be reimbursed by the state for all the $ he lost n his list buisness.
This is great point Corso312, these guys got off but I bet it cost them in the range of 20k to do so! This is one of the major problems with our country.. its not guilt or innocence-its how much $ you have to fight either way.
 

Cory and trevor

Well-Known Member
a justice system overhaul is necessary. if you're going to be held accountable for your "techniques" then you might put some thought into WTF you do to entrap people and even better; think harder about WHO you entrap. AS a tax payer this guy paid for his lawyer AND the prosecution against him. its not unreasonable that the state pay us for his lawyer, do we not pay for the trial costs if we lose our case? So you can't help but fund the guy fucking you (paying taxes pays DA salary) but you got to have enough left to pay a competent lawyer to fight the guy you paid to fuck you. dizzying how one way the system is.
 

GregS

Well-Known Member
But for qualified immunity for government employees, to include the police, it would be possible to file a civil claim for fraud.The government, to include police, holds the monopoly on violence and fraud in their work, and with that immunity to protect themselves from due process that would otherwise put them in jail or in civil court, laugh it up at our expense. Times have changed. It used to be the Soviet model was the example of repression.
 

TheMan13

Well-Known Member
I believe the only way to beat this game is to put the game on trial itself before a jury of our peers. I think the only way this has a chance of entering the legal arena here, and in turn the public consciousness, is an articulate well motivated victim aiming for jury nullification. Although, even this has the chance of being simply dropped prior to trial once discovery gets messy enough. essentially we need the best and brightest among us to rope a dope (DA) and create a public record/precedent of this injustice.

[video=youtube;c2iEDhThQ_U]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c2iEDhThQ_U[/video]
 

GregS

Well-Known Member
I believe the only way to beat this game is to put the game on trial itself before a jury of our peers. I think the only way this has a chance of entering the legal arena here, and in turn the public consciousness, is an articulate well motivated victim aiming for jury nullification. Although, even this has the chance of being simply dropped prior to trial once discovery gets messy enough. essentially we need the best and brightest among us to rope a dope (DA) and create a public record/precedent of this injustice.

[video=youtube;c2iEDhThQ_U]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c2iEDhThQ_U[/video]
What is necessary is that we maintain a full court press using all of our resources. Jury nullification is a facet of that. The Court Crusaders is doing nice work. The testimony at the Judiciary Committee is another. The momentum is going our way, and it is necessary to keep it going and to steer it. Our opposition has had that momentum for far too long, and we ain't giving it back.
 

TheMan13

Well-Known Member
What is necessary is that we maintain a full court press using all of our resources. Jury nullification is a facet of that. The Court Crusaders is doing nice work. The testimony at the Judiciary Committee is another. The momentum is going our way, and it is necessary to keep it going and to steer it. Our opposition has had that momentum for far too long, and we ain't giving it back.
I don't know brother, we have given much blood and treasure in the fight for the right to simply medicate with marijuana over this past decade. Oddly the willful and malicious eradication efforts of federal and state governments have only reached historic levels year after year in the face of all this work. It is clear our movement has only a limited amount of resources here and the legalization/decriminalization industry now monopolizes these resources. See this industry now actually has interest in the inexplicable arrests, raids and seizures done secretly with out accountability. Today when people feel the threat and fear of such clandestine government police action whom do they donate their resources? The laws for the most part have changed with momentum to complete the task in time. It's time now to address the machine and hold it accountable for it's crimes against humanity. We need to refocus the movements limited resources here, it's time for the conversations and challenges to change. It's nice that our MJ act provides us the presumption of innocents by the government as medical patients on paper, now we need to work on the reality of that. There needs to be some accountability, criminal code to be exact, for the clear and systematic transgressions that clearly lacks the presumption of innocents granted to us by law.
 
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