Appellate Court Reverses Conviction of Local San Diego Operator of Medicinal Marijuana Dispensary

by on October 26, 2012 · 4 comments

in California, Civil Rights, Health, Popular, San Diego

Ruling Is Blow to DA Dumanis’ Efforts to “Criminalize” Storefronts of Medical Marijuana Collectives

On Wednesday, October 24th, the Fourth District Court of Appeal for California – located right here in downtown San Diego – issued a unanimous ruling reversing the conviction of a San Diego medical herb dispensary operator, Joyan Jackson. Medical marijuana activists hailed the ruling – a published ruling – as a landmark case. A published case means it applies to other future cases.

Jackson was convicted in September 2010 after being denied a defense in state court, a defense that the court of appeal ruled that he was entitled to, despite the local Superior Court ruling denying it. Joe Elford, Chief Counsel with Americans for Safe Access (ASA), stated:

 “This landmark decision not only recognizes the right of dispensaries to exist and provide medical marijuana to their patient members, it also grants a defense for those providers in state court.”

Elford had also argued Jackson’s appeal before the court just two weeks ago, in the appeal by ASA of Jackson’s conviction in late 2011. Elford added:

“By rejecting the Attorney General’s argument that patients who utilize dispensaries must collaborate, or ‘come together’ in ‘some way’ to cultivate the marijuana they purchase, the court is establishing a clear standard for dispensaries across the state.”

According to the ASA, Wednesday’s ruling specifically held that in mounting a defense at trial, “Jackson was only required to produce evidence which would create a reasonable doubt as to whether the defense provided by the [Medical Marijuana Program Act] had been established.”

The court further held:

“the collective or cooperative association required by the act need not include active participation by all members in the cultivation process but may be limited to financial support by way of marijuana purchases from the organization. Thus, contrary to the trial court’s ruling, the large membership of Jackson’s collective, very few of whom participated in the actual cultivation process, did not, as a matter of law, prevent Jackson from presenting an MMPA defense.”

The case against Jackson became a symbol of the effort by San Diego District Attorney Bonnie Dumanis and other prosecutors across the state to criminalize storefront medical marijuana collectives.

However, Wednesday’s published decision deals a significant blow to that effort. It’s unclear whether the Attorney General will appeal Wednesday’s ruling to the California Supreme Court, but the case may get remanded back to the lower court for proper jury instructions if the district attorney chooses to retry Jackson.

Jackson operated his storefront collective without incident until he was raided by law enforcement in 2008. Jackson was tried for marijuana possession and sales in 2009, but was acquitted by a jury. Dissatisfied with that result, District Attorney Dumanis tried Jackson again on the same charges stemming from a September 2009 law enforcement raid.

It was at his second trial that Jackson was denied a defense and ultimately convicted. San Diego Superior Court Judge Howard Shore, who referred to medical marijuana as “dope,” and called California’s medical marijuana laws “a scam,” had sentenced Jackson to 180 days in jail.

{ 3 comments… read them below or add one }

Jose October 27, 2012 at 6:47 am

That judge should be reclused from every drug case that ever comes before him. This is such a disgrace and makes the legal system nothing but a glorified joke.

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bobby day October 27, 2012 at 3:18 pm

this will force showdown between state and federal law a supreme court decision we HAVE to win. they have no choice, because if we lose then we thumb our noses at them and keep it legal making them a laughing stock

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Terrie Leigh Relf October 28, 2012 at 10:59 pm

Don’t get me started. . .How I wish Dumanis et al would retire on an island far away from civilization . . .

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