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UID:Indybay-18559831
SEQUENCE:18602892
CREATED:20090108T191200Z
DESCRIPTION:ED ROSENTHAL MEDICAL MARIJUANA CASE CONTINUES\n\nWHO: Noted author and 
 medical marijuana activist Ed Rosenthal, represented by attorney Michael 
 Clough\n\nWHAT: Oral arguments on Rosenthal's appeal of his conviction at 
 retrial on federal marijuana charges\n\nWHEN: Wednesday, January 14, 2009 - 
 9:00am\n\nWHERE:  Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, 95 7th St. (@ Mission 
 St.), Courtroom #3, San Francisco, CA\n\nNEW APPEAL FOR RENOWNED MEDICAL 
 MARIJUANA ACTIVIST ED ROSENTHAL\n\nNinth Circuit to consider if famed 
 grower was denied rights during retrial\n\nThe high-profile case of author 
 and medical marijuana advocate Ed Rosenthal returns to the courtroom on 
 Wednesday, January 14. Oral arguments will be heard by the federal Ninth 
 Circuit Court of Appeals to determine whether Rosenthal was denied his 
 rights during a retrial in May 2007 on cultivation charges. Rosenthal 
 maintains that his conviction should be thrown out because he was not 
 allowed to present a complete defense to the jury.\n\nU.S. v. Rosenthal, a 
 case that epitomizes the clash between state and federal marijuana laws, 
 has taken many turns in its six-year history.\n\nIn 2003, Rosenthal was 
 convicted for growing and distributing marijuana, even though he was 
 deputized by Oakland city officials to do so as part of the city’s 
 efforts to promote safe distribution of marijuana to patients under 
 California's Prop 215. After the Ninth Circuit overturned his conviction in 
 2006 due to juror misconduct, Rosenthal was retried and convicted in a 
 second trial described by Rosenthal’s appellate brief as “little more 
 than a long, drawn out directed verdict.”\n\nThe Ninth Circuit Court of 
 Appeals will now hear Rosenthal’s second appeal, which argues that 
 defendants have a fundamental right to present a complete and effective 
 defense in cases where there is a conflict between state and federal law.  
 To date, 13 states having enacted medical marijuana laws, despite the 
 federal prohibition on all uses of the drug.\n\n"If his conviction is 
 allowed to stand, overzealous federal prosecutors  may criminalize the 
 efforts of local officials to implement  controversial state and local 
 initiatives," said Rosenthal’s lead attorney, Michael Clough.\n\nAmong 
 the specific questions that Clough will ask the appellate panel to decide 
 are:\n\n(1) Whether the jury should have been allowed to hear evidence that 
 Rosenthal acted on a good faith belief  that he had been deputized by the 
 City of Oakland.\n\n(2) Whether, given the complex and unsettled nature of 
 constitutional precedents governing differences in  federal and state laws 
 with regard to issues such as medical marijuana, Rosenthal should have been 
 allowed  to present a defense based on mistake of law.\n\n(3) Whether 
 Rosenthal should have been allowed to offer testimony by Oakland city 
 officials to refute the  allegation that he was involved in an unlawful 
 conspiracy.\n\n(4) Whether the trial judge, U.S. District Court Judge 
 Charles Breyer, denied Rosenthal’s constitutional right to testify in his 
 own defense when he ruled that Rosenthal could testify but would not be 
 allowed to present  witnesses to corroborate his claim that he believed he 
 was lawfully acting to further regulations enacted by the Oakland city 
 council to ensure the safe distribution of marijuana to patients.\n\n\nThe 
 Rosenthal case began in February 2002, when he was arrested along with 
 several others in federal raids timed to coincide with a speech in San 
 Francisco by DEA Director Asa Hutchinson. After a trial that generated 
 major media coverage, Rosenthal was convicted a year later. The majority of 
 the jurors, however, recanted the next day, setting off another flurry of 
 press coverage, including segments on Dateline, NPR and CNN.\n\nIn a 
 dramatic departure from federal sentencing guidelines, Judge Breyer 
 sentenced Rosenthal on June 4, 2003 to a one-day sentence, with credit for 
 time served. Rosenthal nonetheless appealed on principle, and was granted a 
 new trial by the Ninth Circuit in April 2006. "No one should be made a 
 felon for doing humanitarian work on behalf of their community," Rosenthal 
 said "The Federal Government continues to treat patients like 
 criminals."\n\n \n-END-\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2009/01/08/18559831.php
SUMMARY:Appeal Hearing For Medical Marijuana Case US v. Rosenthal
LOCATION:Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, 95 7th St. (@ Mission St.), Courtroom #3, 
 San Francisco, CA
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2009/01/08/18559831.php
DTSTART:20090114T170000Z
DTEND:20090114T183000Z
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