So much for California Medical Mary Jane

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The Feds won...

California Medical Marijuana Dispensary Owner Charlie Lynch Found Guilty in Grotesque Miscarriage of Justice
REASON
Nick Gillespie | August 5, 2008, 7:28pm

Charles Lynch, the owner of a medical marijuana dispensary in Morro Bay, California that was fully compliant with state laws, has been found guilty in federal court of pushing drugs. The grim details, courtesy of The Los Angeles Times:

* The owner of a Morro Bay marijuana dispensary was found guilty today in federal court of five counts of distributing drugs.

Charles Lynch, the owner of the dispensary, faces a minimum of five years in prison.

His closely watched trial involved conflicting marijuana laws and went to a federal court jury Monday. Jurors were asked to determine if Lynch was guilty of violating federal drug laws.

During a week-and-a-half-long trial in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles, federal prosecutors sought to depict Lynch as a common drug dealer who sold pot to teenagers and carried a backpack stuffed with cash.

Lynch was charged with distributing marijuana, conspiring to distribute marijuana and providing marijuana to people under the age of 21.

Whole news story here.

Lynch is one of the countless casualties of an idiotic and tragically long-running war on drugs. His shop scrupulously followed Golden State laws and when he opened his shop in Morro Bay, local officials attended the ribbon-cutting ceremony. And that kid he provided medical marijuana to? A high school athlete who had lost a leg to cancer and had a prescription from a Stanford-trained doctor (and in any case, Lynch only dealt with the boy's parents). Yes, a common drug dealer.

There's only one good possibility to come out of this verdict: That its manifest injustice and stupidity and inhumanity (to Lynch and his customers) will help spark a long overdue reaction to the drug war and its punishing toll on individuals and basic Constitutional rights.

reason has been covering this story closely. Its import goes beyond drug policy to questions about federalism and whether or not states can truly be laboratories of experimentation and it compounds the awful logic of the Supreme Court's dreadful ruling in Gonzales v. Raich (2005) which invoked the commerce clause in deciding that federal laws overrode state laws when it came to medical marijuana.

Click here for coverage, including video updates featuring key players in the case, of the trial of Lynch.

Click below to watch the Drew Carey Project documentary "Raiding California" that tells the truth about Charlie Lynch.

http://www.reason.com/blog/show/127940.html
 

Regional Manager, Dunder Mifflin Inc.
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The Feds always win.

Sad but true.

Best quote I heard the other day.. "You know why they made the second amendment, so when the first one gets taken away, we still have the second (right to bearer arms)"

That is what I pack the Glock. Locked and loaded and gun that doesn't have a safety. Always ready to go. Once I lose my 1st amendment, I got my 2nd.
 

Oh boy!
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I believe the States only have the right to make laws in cases where Federal law is absent. In this case there are Federal laws against medical marijuana.

In other words, States can't make laws that go against Federal laws.
 

bushman
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Depends whose in charge.

Separate but equal.
Quid pro quo
 

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Handicapper
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Sad but true.

Best quote I heard the other day.. "You know why they made the second amendment, so when the first one gets taken away, we still have the second (right to bearer arms)"

That is what I pack the Glock. Locked and loaded and gun that doesn't have a safety. Always ready to go. Once I lose my 1st amendment, I got my 2nd.

What do you mean it doesn't have a safety?

Only an idiot would carry a gun without a safety.
 

Honey Badger Don't Give A Shit
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I believe the States only have the right to make laws in cases where Federal law is absent. In this case there are Federal laws against medical marijuana.

In other words, States can't make laws that go against Federal laws.

States can of course make laws which conflict with federal law.

It's up to the feds to persec----errrrrr, ---Prosecute

Lynch's case is another sad, sad story of federal drug policy madness.

But we can take a modest bit of solace in knowing that even as he was being convicted, there were literally hundreds of thousands (some estimates push closer to 1.5million+) of Californians cultivating, supplying and consuming state-legal medical marijuana.

The Pigs at the DEA merely make sufficient busts to create the perception that their federally-supplied operations budget is well spent.

Meanwhile, they're left uninvited to any of the good social gatherings nationwide, since after all, who wants to party with a Pig?

They're stuck hanging out with each other, drinking the drug alcohol and smoking the drug tobacco in their lonely gatherings where they quite sensibly hide their faces and identities from the public at large.

The Pigs of the DEA bring shame to the other 99% of law enforcement - most of whom are honorable, hard working public servants.
 

Honey Badger Don't Give A Shit
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What do you mean it doesn't have a safety?

Only an idiot would carry a gun without a safety.

I think we can all pretty much agree with this post.


Never gets old reading the claims of the alleged gunslingers who are all locked, loaded and ready to draw down on federal agents.
 

New member
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Glocks have a safety, it's just built into the trigger

back in 93 I was living in Denver and walked into a Walmart and bought a Glock 10 mm pistol, I was able to walk out with it that day along with ammo

took it to work the next day to show my buddies, who were into guns too, didn't have a holster yet so put it in my glovebox on the way home

later that night had a date. On the way there I heard the gun bouncing around in the glovebox, loaded....forgot it was still there..... so took it out and set it on the seat. Got lost and made a wrong turn and ended up at the guardshack at Lowrys AFB. The MP saw it and of course freaked out and pulled me out of the car at gunpoint. They were pretty cool about it but of course was arrested

Went to court, and they charged me with a felony. DA refused to plea, and made a big spiel in front of the judge....."judge, this gun has NO SAFETY!!"

luckily judge was a gun enthusiast too and put the DA in her place, dropped it down to a misdemeanor if I agreed to leave the state, which I did

sorry for the novel......your post MJ brought back some memories, BTW great gun, never saw it again though
 

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