Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Victory In Kitsap! Lessons And Moments From The Bruce Olson Medical Marijuana Trial

Medical marijuana patient Bruce Olson, left, with attorney Thomas Balerud at the Kitsap County Courthouse, March 24, 2009. Photo by Reality Catcher

Medical marijuana patients may be a little safer in their homes in Kitsap County, Washington tonight.

Almost two years after his arrest, and after a very expensive prosecution, 55-year-old patient Bruce Olson of Olalla has been acquitted by a jury of all charges stemming from the bust of a hidden marijuana grow-room.

The case has national implications, has received lots of attention and could make a huge difference in future medical marijuana enforcement in Kitsap County and elsewhere in Washington. The importance of the Olson case wasn't lost on local and King County medical marijuana activists, who attended the entire trial en masse to offer their moral support and to silently witness to the trial.

The Back Story In Brief

Back in May of 2007, Olson and his then-estranged wife, Pamela, 51, were both arrested after the WestNET Drug Task Force raided their home and seized 48 immature marijuana plants growing in an underground bunker behind the main structure. Both Olsons had valid, doctor-approved medical marijuana recommendations, which the police found upon searching the house.

Bruce lost his home and now lives in a travel trailer due to legal costs involved in fighting two felony charges brought by the Kitsap County Prosecutor’s Office. “Everything I’ve worked for in my entire life is gone,” said Olson, who suffers from arthritis and other ailments following decades as a stonemason. “But it’s all worth it for the cause: quit arresting medical marijuana patients.”

The prosecution's expensive boondoggle was all for naught; even flying in a "confidential informant," Stephen Kenney, from Oklahoma, didn't help. (Neither did the fact that Kenney, an obvious tweaker who admitted doing hard drugs and alcohol every day for 19 years, is in the running for "most unconvincing prosecution witness in history.")

Ineptitude And Arrogance: Not A Good Combination

Kitsap County Head Prosecutor Russell Hauge handed off the case to Alexis Foster. It must have been a hell of an initiation for Foster, as her first-ever jury trial. Her greenness showed; while her command of the facts showed a certain grim competence, her lack of connection to the jury showed advanced cluelessness.

Here's a couple of hints, Alexis: It did NOT help your case to have a visible smirk on your face every time Judge Leila Mills ruled in your favor. And you really should consider working on another "speaking voice" to use before juries. The one you used in this trial, along with all the unnecessary sarcasm and pissiness with which you imbued it, quickly becomes about as enjoyable as fingernails on a chalkboard.

In American justice, there's only one force in the courtroom more powerful than the judge, and that's the jury. Alexis, you can't act obnoxiously throughout a one-week trial and expect to win over many converts. Nobody likes a jerk.

Oh, and you don't get to pick where medical marijuana patients position their grow-rooms; your attempts to second-guess the Olsons on this point wasn't helpful to your case. Also, your insistence that since Bruce used medical marijuana he should apparently, in your non-medical estimation, suddenly no longer need any other prescription drugs at all, is just laughable.

.......

But, in all fairness, Foster was handed a very hard case to win. At the time of the Olsons' arrest, the exact number of marijuana plants which may be legally grown by patients was undefined, with one WestNET detective testifying before the jury that their "working number" for such grows was 27 plants per patient.

That all changed last July, when, at the direction of the Washington Legislature, the Department of Health released new "presumptive limits" for patients of 15 growing plants and 24 ounces of dried, usable marijuana.

Predictably -- and just as many medical marijuana advocates had feared -- it didn't take long for law enforcement to try to use these presumptive limits, supposedly instituted for the protection of patients, providers, and police, as a weapon against patients. Prosecutor Foster repeatedly and loudly referred to the new 15-plant limit throughout the trial, but the jury wasn't fooled. Bruce Olson's lawyer, Thomas Balerud, was very effective in telling the jury that there were, in effect, NO plant limits in force at the time of the arrests.

Moments To Remember

Anytime you spend a week with a group of fellow activists, as I have during this trial, there are plenty of memorable moments. Here are a few of mine, remembered in no particular order.

• When Prosecutor Foster attempted to impeach the credibility of defense witness Paul Stanford, an expert on marijuana cultivation who is also CEO of The Hemp and Cannabis Foundation (THCF), she wanted to use Stanford's long history with marijuana against him. Foster asked him "Why did you grow marijuana before it was legal for medical use?" Paul answered quickly, easily, and believably: "Because I like marijuana." Bada-BING!!!

• When Prosecutor Foster attempted to impeach Pamela Olson's testimony that she operated the grow-room, the prosecutor implied that Pam wouldn't be able to pick up one of the ballast units used to power marijuana-growing lights. Olson, who is quite a small woman, offered to pick up the ballast in front of the jury -- and did so, to the prosecutor's embarrassment.


• Prosectutor Foster attempted to impeach the credibility of defense witness Dr. Thomas Orvald, an expert in the use of medical marijuana. Foster first asked the doctor about his stated reluctance to prescribe harsh narcotic painkillers to patients, then, thinking she was swooping in for the kill, asked him, "Why do you recommend marijuana if you are against narcotics?" To which the good Doctor quickly and correctly answered, "Because marijuana is not a narcotic."

• Immediately after the trial, defense attorney Balerud told reporters: “In this case, the jury spoke its mind and determined that no lawyers should be able to overrule a doctor’s judgment.” That is indeed the bottom line. Why, when it comes to marijuana, do law enforcement types immediately become medical "experts"? And why aren't the detectives of WestNET able to let go of their irrational hatred of marijuana and the people who use it, now that medical marijuana's been legal in Washington for ELEVEN YEARS?

Special thanks to my good friend Phil Mocek for generously sharing his excellent trial notes with Reality Catcher.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Let's Tell The Truth About Marijuana


"A weed is a flower, too, once you get to know it." ~ Eeyore from "Winnie The Pooh"

After 72 years of the debate being controlled by those who've made it a taboo to even talk about the subject, it's time to tell the truth about marijuana.

The deck is still stacked, of course, in favor of cannabis prohibition. The reason? Folks who know that marijuana is harmless are often too intimidated to say so, because until now, speaking cannabis truth has carried a heavy price.


For years, a few brave medical doctors such as Lester Grinspoon of Harvard have been voices in the wilderness of marijuana prohibition. Their repeated calls for an open and honest debate on the subject have largely fallen on deaf ears, because until now, when it comes to marijuana, those who know won't say, and those who say don't know.

To depart from official, ONDCP-backed orthodoxy on the subject has been to risk expulsion from polite society, to risk the scorn of peers, to risk being branded as a slack-jawed pothead incapable of forming a coherent sentence, to risk losing the right to be taken seriously, to risk ridicule as a stoner stereotype, to risk dismissal from our jobs, to risk loss of our families and homes, and to risk legal consequences including arrest and incarceration.

Why are the anti-pot forces so scared of an open discussion? If the facts are on their side, why must anti-marijuana warriors try to shut down the debate? If health is the issue, why aren't the extensive scientific studies considered relevant? If crime is the issue, then why can't we discuss alternatives to the failed criminal model? If kids are the issue, then why can't we (novel idea) just be honest with them about the effects, drawbacks, and rewards of marijuana use?


Ah, "the kids." Seems they are mentioned every time the legalization of marijuana is mentioned, as in "what kind of message will that send the kids?"

Well, how about sending them the message that it's now OK to be honest about drugs? How about being honest enough about marijuana so that the warnings against using harder drugs like meth, cocaine, and heroin will be taken seriously, rather than being dismissed as just more hysterical propaganda -- you know, like what we've been telling them for seven decades about pot?

If we expect young people to take us seriously, we have to tell them the truth. When we tell them ridiculous things about marijuana, they're not going to listen when we try to tell them about the dangers of other drugs.

Lights In The Darkness

Just before any quantum change in public perceptions, there are brave visionaries who are ahead of the curve, who are leading the way towards a better understanding of the truth.

Because many are in the position of fearing professional reprisal and loss of livelihood, being honest about marijuana has until now been a luxury which can be indulged by only a few. But thank goodness these few push open the door a little wider, letting in the truth, and in any open debate in a free society, the truth will eventually prevail.

• People like travel guru Rick Steves, who says he decided to speak the truth about marijuana because he has no boss, thus he doesn't have to worry about being fired.


• People like film director John Holowach, whose excellent documentary High: The True Tale of American Marijuana has been largely ignored by the mainstream press.

• People like Ed Rosenthal and Jack Herer and Dennis Peron and Keith Stroup and Rob Kampia and Paul Stanford and so many others who have managed to make changing minds and rules about marijuana not only their life's work, but also a paying occupation.

These leaders are all contributing to changing the paradigm -- changing it so much that soon, my brothers and sisters, we will all be able to speak the truth without fear. It's time for truth and reconciliation, and if you're a pot prisoner or a medical marijuana patient or a righteous caregiver or a recreational smoker, the truth will set you free.

It's A Done Deal

People have grown tired of the official lies about marijuana. The public is rapidly reaching a critical mass where folks will no longer be willing to be led, unthinking and sheep-like, down the primrose path of prohibition.

The cannabis cat is out of the bag. Too many people know the truth about marijuana for the ganja genie to be stuffed back into the bottle.

Let's tell the truth about marijuana.

Marijuana Facts: The Truth About Pot

Erowid: The Truth About Marijuana

Change The Climate: Time To Tell The Truth About Marijuana