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Shasta County District Attorney Benito, Not A Good Choice For Re-Election! By Rob McDonald
At approximately 9:30 a.m. Monday Morning February 11th, 2008 in Redding, California, a victim testified against her ex boyfriend. Unfortunately the victim could not testify that her ex boyfriend kidnapped, and held her hostage on Wednesday August 8th, 2007. She wasn't able to testify about how he kept slamming her head into the wall, pulled hair out of her head, raped and sodomized her, and threw her kitten over the fence and against the neighbor’s outside wall. All of the charges for those crimes had been dropped by the Shasta County District Attorney's office. Together they carried up to 25 years worth of prison time. Instead, the ex boyfriend pleaded guilty to a new charge. After he was arrested for the previous mentioned offenses, he told the victim he was going to kill her and her family if she testified against him. For the new charge, he was given 278 days in jail, and given credit for time served as well as early release credit for “being good in jail” which allowed his release that very day in the same vicinity as the victim. All other charges were dropped. Many of the news stories about this crime report that he did these things to his girlfriend. The victim had broken up with the defendant weeks before these incidents occurred, and was no longer his girlfriend. The other things that could not be brought up in the victim's testimony against her ex boyfriend's only current charge for fear of a mistrial are the police report about his previous girlfriend, who’s arm he cut with a knife during a fight. That girlfriend dropped those charges. Could it be because he threatened her life too? The District Attorney is also aware that the perpetrator has been implicated in many thefts over the years. While implication is not enough to convict a thief, it is obvious what kind of person this perpetrator is, and experience teaches us that people like this usually don’t go away until they are put away. The District Attorney knows all of these things. And yet the perpetrator was offered the plea deal of a lifetime. Why? The victim learned about the deal that was being made the day after Governor Schwarzenegger declared that prison budgets would be cut, and 22,000 prisoners would be released. I would speculate that was the real reason for the new plea deal from the DA’s office, I think it is time to consider that we need a District Attorney that knows where to cut budgets, and that letting violent offenders out on the street will not be tolerated. Violent offenders were not part of Schwarzenegger’s release schedule. The victim was told that because she has pictures on myspace from nights out with her friends, the District Attorney’s office worried that they wouldn’t get a conviction for all of the heinous offenses. Obviously we have a very narrow minded District Attorney, and he thinks that we the potential jurors are all as narrow minded as he exhibits. How many women in Shasta County want to have charges for a rape and an assault perpetrated against them dropped, simply because they happened to dress with style and flair when they went out that night? I don’t believe that is the case, but rather an excuse to cover the budget cuts. We not only have a DA that doesn’t know the proper place to cut budgets, but he’s willing to vilify a victim in the press in order to bring about his political agenda. His office did this to a victim that has already been on a devastating emotional roller coaster. Also, considering the allegations of impropriety between a Redding massage parlor, and Benito, it seems rather hypocritical to suggest the victim was less of a person because of the way she dresses. I started looking into what is involved in recalling a public official when I heard about this obvious compromise of the safety of my family, friends, and neighbors, and the uncaring treatment of a victim of a heinous crime. It seems that we would need 15 % of the registered voters in Shasta County to sign the recall petition to recall Jerry Benito our District Attorney. The time and effort involved would be high, so we need to remember this incident in 2010 when Benito is up for re-election. Also, shame on the Record Searchlight for not following up on this story after the original incident made front page news. They printed a story on the deal that was made, but they didn't let everyone know that the perpetrator was released the day his victim finally was able to testify. They also have not followed up on the fact that the perpetrator is currently going through the trial process on a violation of probation for Drunk in public where the police report stated that he could not stand up, or walk right in front of Secrets adult store. If any of the sex related offenses had not been dropped, he would not have been able to legally come near that building. Two charges to violate him on would have been better than one, how is this guy not a registered sex offender after what he did? There are many reasons to find a new District Attorney for Shasta County. I have yet to see a compelling reason to keep the one we have.
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The Battle Over Healthcare Medicinal Marijuana on Freefire Radio
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Counterpunch.org Breakdown of Gerald Benito's Unlawful Activities This story from Counterpunch (http://www.counterpunch.org/gardner02082008.html) in February of 2008 shows Benito's willingness to ignore state law for his and other's beliefs to the complete stomping on of civil rights on the law abiding citizens of Shasta County. Such arrogance as Benito displays toward his agenda, and toward the citizens that follow state law, and are persecuted by him must be rewarded with his firing. It is up to the people of Shasta County to fire him in the 2010 election. Even today, Benito cites federal law over state law, despite President Obama's memo to quit harassing dispensaries and patients.
Weekend Edition Pot Shots"The District Attorney of Shasta County Doesn't Know the Law!"By FRED GARDNER and PEBBLES TRIPPET Denney v. DEA et al is a civil lawsuit by California physician Philip A. Denney against the agencies involved in sending undercover operatives to his office in the fall of 2005. As reported previously in Counterpunch, the agents feigned histories and symptoms to get Denny's approval to medicate with cannabis. Denney learned of the deceitful visits when a concerned citizen sent him the "Investigative Narrative(s)" prepared by Redding police officer Tracy Miller. Denney sued, contending that the elaborate deception infringed on his First Amendment right to discuss marijuana use with patients. He cited a 2004 ruling by the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeal in the case of Conant v. Drug Czar that upheld a permanent injunction barring the government from investigating a pro-cannabis doctor without probable cause. In seeking a dismissal of Denney's suit, the government claimed that there had been an investigation of a Redding dispensary called Dixon Herbs, and that agents obtaining Denney's approval to medicate with cannabis were simply gaining access to that dispensary so they could make controlled buys. Last summer U.S. District Judge Lawrence K. Karlton denied the motion to dismiss. In October, Denney's lawyer, Zenia Gilg, took depositions from the law enforcement agents who participated in the investigation. She was seeking evidence that in selecting Denney's office to visit, they had been motivated by "retaliatory animus" towards an outspoken pro-cannabis doctor. As Gilg reconstructs the scenario, Shasta County DA Gerald Benito had told Deputy DA Ben Hanna that as evidence against Dixon Herbs he wanted four controlled buys - three from confidential informants, plus one from a government agent. "But they didn't need any more informants," Gilg says she ascertained. "Hanna already had a CI with a doctor's recommendation working for him, who made the first buy. Then they send a CI to Dixon Herbs and he's told that he can get a recommendation from a Dr. Rosenthal, who's going to be at the dispensary Oct. 8. Meanwhile the first CI goes back to Dixon Herbs and makes another buy. So they need one more CI to make one more buy, and that's their excuse for going to Dr. Denney's office. "But what we learned from deposing Officer Hale was that he had a CI working for him who already had a doctor's recommendation! They could have used him to make the buy, but they didn't, they said, because he was in Sacramento." Instead of sending Hale's CI from Sacramento to Dixon Herbs -a two-hour drive that would cost $25 in gas- the investigators deployed another CI to go into Denney's office and lie to get a recommendation, while they conducted a stake-out in the parking lot. Perhaps the government can argue - truthfully!- that they weren't investigating Denney, their agents were simply running up their billable hours. The whole exercise was totally unnecessary, Gilg observes, because Dixon Herbs openly advertised itself as a medical marijuana dispensary in a local newspaper and online. She adds, "The business license which Dixon Herbs got in May 2005, basically says 'We're a medical marijuana dispensary.' They could have gone to Ron Dixon and said 'We notice you have a business license that says you're a medical marijuana dispensary and you advertise on the internet as a medical marijuana dispensary and we don't think that's legal.' How simple would that have been? "It's common sense -give them a warning. Ask them to stop. Especially when they're doing it openly." Gilg also learned, she says, that the investigation of Dixon Herbs was launched as "a Redding Police-Shasta County operation -not DEA- but with a twist I found very interesting. Ordinarily, such investigations are handled by a task force called SINTF [pronounced sin-teff] that includes the Shasta County District Attorney, the Sheriff, Redding Police, Anderson Police, the state Bureau of Narcotics, CHP, and some other agencies. But to go after Dixon Herbs they created a different organization, because the state attorney general mandates that anytime a task force investigates a medical dispensary, they have to get the okay [from the AG's office]. SINTF didn't want to do that, so they created another group that included many of the same agencies, including the Shasta County DA, the sheriff, the DA -and they didn't need the attorney general's okay." How did Gilg find out about SINTF's end-run around the attorney general's office? "[Redding Police officer] Tracy Miller admitted it at the deposition. Flat out." Gilg believes that the impetus for the move against Dixon Herbs may have come from MacGregor Scott, a former DA of Shasta County whom George Bush had appointed U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of California. Scott had issued a memo August 1, 2005 - "just after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in the Raich case," Gilg notes, "and just before this investigation began"- inviting all law enforcement agencies in the Eastern District to forward medical marijuana cases to his office. Gilg says, "Scott's memo told every DA
in the state, 'Hand us your medical marijuana cases, because there's no
defense under federal law.' And a lot of DAs who had cases they weren't
sure they could win in Superior Court went 'Right on. How cool is
that?'" "Most interesting of all," says Gilg of the depositions, "was their astonishing level of ignorance. When I asked Benito if he knew the case of People vs. Urziceanu, he said 'No.' "'People vs. Wright?' "'No.' "'People vs. Mower?' "''I've heard of it, but I can't tell you what it says.' "That's crazy! 'People vs. Spark?' "'Never heard of it.' "'People vs. Jones?' "'Never heard of it.' "'Conant vs.McCaffrey?' "'Never heard of it.' "The district attorney of Shasta County doesn't know the law!," says Gilg. Benito's deputy, Ben Hanna, had heard of Spark and Jones. The gist of all these key decisions -controlling precedents in the districts in which they were handed down- is provided below. The government -both the federal and state defendants- have filed motions for "summary judgment" which will be argued before Judge Karlton March 24. These are post-deposition claims that the case should be dismissed because, based on the evidence presented, no harm was done to Denney and no reasonable jury could find for him. Says Zenia Gilg, "A lot of things came out in the depositions that are going to strengthen our position at trial, and nothing came out that's going to weaken it. Of course the government denied that they were investigating Dr. Denney, but as Judge Karlton said, 'You can deny that all you want but the facts are the facts.' And the big one is that they had another informant who had a recommendation." Denney's suit names as defendants the Drug Enforcement Administration, DEA Administrator Karen Tandy and Agent Dennis Hale; the Federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives, FBATFE Director Carl J. Truscott, and Agent Steven Decker; the Office of the Shasta County District Attorney, D.A. Gerald Benito; the Shasta County Sheriff's Department, Sheriff James Pope, Deputy Robert Modin, and Deputy Christopher McQuillan; the Redding Police Department, RPD Chief Leonard Moty, Officer Tracy Miller, and Officer Eric Wallace; and Does 1-40. Memo to Shasta County D.A. Gerlad Benito At depositions in the Denney v. DEA et al law suit, Deputy DA Ben Hanna, who was acting in an advisory capacity to law enforcement in connection with the Dixon Herbs investigation, did not know the propositions for which the following cases stood:Urziceanu, Wright, Mower and Conant. You yourself acknowledged unfamiliarity with those four cases, as well asSpark and Jones. To help your office perform its
mission properly, legal affairs analyst Pebbles Trippet has prepared the
following executive summary. People v Mower (Aug 2002) California Supreme Court Issue: Are medical-marijuana users and people who use prescription medicines equal under the law? Facts: Myron Mower, a legally blind diabetic, confessed from his hospital bed (while hooked up to a morphine IV drip) and was convicted of cultivating 31 plants. He was sentenced to five years probation. The 5th District Appeals Court denied his appeal. Ruling: The Supreme Court reversed Mower's conviction based on incorrect instructions to the jury regarding the burden of proof. Patient-defendants need only raise a reasonable doubt (a doctor's authorization); the prosecution must disprove beyond a reasonable doubt, not by "preponderance of the evidence." Doctor-approved marijuana users are "no more criminal than" those who use prescription meds. The Court created a new motion to dismiss, prior to preliminary hearing, i.e., a doctor's authorization is the equivalent of a prescription and grounds for immediate dismissal. Conant v Walters (Dec 2002) US Court of Appeals, 9th Circuit Conant protects physicians' First Amendment right to discuss and recommend medical cannabis under state law regardless of conflicting federal law. It was originally filed as Conant v McCaffrey) to stop the federal government from interfering with the right of California doctors to make medical decisions based on discussions with their patients. Dr. Conant was granted a permanent injunction preventing the Drug Czar, the DEA and other federal officials from even investigating doctors for authorizing medical cannabis under state law without probable cause. People v Jones (Sept 2003) 112 CalApp4th 341 o 3d Appellate District o Sacramento County Issue: What qualifies as a physician's approval to use marijuana for migraine headaches? Facts: William Ira Jones was found guilty of cultivation of 31 marijuana plants for migraines after a no-contest plea. He testified at a pre-trial hearing that his doctor had stated, "It might help. Go ahead." The court determined that the jury could find that such a "favorable opinion" qualifies as a physician's approval, even though the doctor admitted that he was afraid to issue a written approval. Thus the trial court erred in precluding defendant from presenting his defense to the jury, and the order granting four years probation was reversed. Ruling: A defendant need only raise a reasonable doubt as to whether s/he had a doctor's approval to permit a jury to decide the question. People v Spark (Aug 2004) 121 CalApp4th259 o 5th Appellate District o Kern County Issue: Must a patient be considered "seriously ill" to qualify for protection under Prop 215? Facts: Noel Spark, a patient being treated for chronic back pain, was arrested for growing three plants. Spark was found guilty of cultivation at two jury trials. Both verdicts were reversed on appeal, based on the jury having been erroneously instructed. At the first trial the jury was instructed to decide based on the "preponderance of evidence" not "beyond a reaonable doubt." At the second trial the jury was allowed to interpret the meaning of "seriously ill," which is not a jury issue. Ruling: A physician's determination that the use of marijuana is appropriate is not to be second-guessed by jurors. People v Urziceanu (Sept 2005) 132 Cal App 4th 747 o 3d Appellate District o Sacramento County Issue: Is collective or cooperative cultivation and distribution lawful under Prop 215 and SB420? Facts: Michael Urziceanu and his partner Susan Rodger created FloraCare, a cooperatively run dispensary near Sacramento. Some members contributed medicine and got "suggested donations." Floracare was first raided 9/18/01. After reorganizing as a co-op, they were raided again. A jury acquitted Urziceanu of cultivation and sales but convicted for conspiracy to sell (a three-year sentence). Ruling: While Prop 215 may not have protected collective medical marijuana gardens and sales, SB420 (which created Health & Safety Code 11362.7) did. The appeals court unanimously reversed and remanded for a new trial, based on improper jury instructions on conspiracy and mistake of law, as well as search and seizure procedures. The court applied expanded protections to patients and caregivers as long as the medicine-providing processes are collectively or cooperatively organized for the good of the whole, rather than for individual profit. People v Wright (Nov 2006) 40 Cal4th 81 o Supreme Court o Orange County Issues: Was the trial court's refusal to instruct the jury about an implicit Prop 215 defense to transportation of personal-use marijuana prejudicial or harmless error? The 4th District appeals court had reversed the conviction, ruling it was prejudicial to the defendant to deny the instruction to the jury. The appeals court had ruled it was prejudicial to the defendant to deny the defense. The California Supreme Court granted review to resolve the conflict between two appellate decisions: Trippet (Prop 215 confers an "implicit right" to transport) and Young (215 doesn't protect transportation). Second issue: is the quantity a patient can possess under SB420 not to exceed eight ounces of dried marijuana? Facts: Huntington Beach police stopped Shaun Eric Wright as he was leaving a carwash in his pick-up. A search revealed 1lb, 3oz of marijuana, which Wright used with a doctor's approval. A jury convicted him of transportation and possession for sale. The 4th District Appeals Court reversed based on the trial court's refusal to instruct the jury about a 215 defense to the transportation charge. Ruling: The California Supreme Court reversed the appeals court ruling on grounds that the trial judge's error in not allowing the transportation defense was harmless, not prejudicial, error. While granting the judge should have allowed the defense, "the omission of the instruction did not affect the trial outcome, thus rendering the trial unfair." The Court reinstated the convictions and remanded for further proceedings on defendants' additional claims of instructional error. On the question of whether Prop 215 implicitly allowed transportation of marijuana for personal use, the Supreme Court determined "that Trippet, not Young, was the better-reasoned decision." On the question of legal quantity, the Supreme Court ruled that SB420 had established six mature plants and eight ounces of processed cannabis as a minimum that counties had to allow patients to possess -not a maximum.
Documents obtained by the lawyer defending Ron Dixon -Ed Denson of Redway- included a revealing email from DA Benito to Redding PD Captain Chuck Lebak, sent on Feb. 8, 2006. Lebak had asked for guidance: "The Chief has received a letter from Eugene Denson, the attorney representing Ron Dixon (marijuana collective owner). He has 16 questions he would like the chief to respond to. The questions all deal with how marijuana collectives can operate legally Let me know how you would like us to proceed." Benito replied: "Thanks for letting me know. For over a year now, I have received calls from marijuana users wanting to know how they can grow and sell it legally. I have refused to give them advice in this area. I will do the same if this attorney calls or writes me. I tell them that I do not like or agree with the law, therefore I will not help people fall under the protections of the law. I usually advise that they obtain an attorney, but this guy is an attorney. He can read the law as well as I can." Maybe better. Prejudice distorts comprehension. Fred Gardner edits and Pebbles Trippet covers legal affairs for O'Shaughnessy's, the journal of cannabis in clinical practice. The Winter/Spring 2008 issue can be ordered from journal@ccrmg.org |