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from Drug War Chronicle, Issue #508, 11/2/07 -- Ronnie Naulls never saw it
coming. The church-going businessman, husband, and father of three young girls
knew he was taking a risk when he opened a medical marijuana dispensary in Corona,
a suburban community in the high desert of Riverside County east of Los Angeles.
Although he had played by the rules, obeyed all state laws, and successfully
battled the city in court to stay open, Naulls knew there was a chance of trouble
with law enforcement. He knew there was a chance of the federal DEA coming down
on him, as it has done with at least 40 other dispensaries this year alone.
But when they did come down on him, it was far worse than he ever imagined.
At 6:00am on July 17, the quiet of Naulls' suburban neighborhood was disrupted
by the whir of hovering helicopters as heavily armed DEA agents stormed his
home and collective. They seized cash and marijuana, they seized his property,
they seized his personal and business bank accounts. They arrested him on federal
marijuana charges.
But that wasn't enough for the DEA. The raiders also called Child Protective
Services (CPS). With Naulls already hustled off to jail, his wife sitting handcuffed
in a police car, and his home in a shambles after being tossed by the DEA, CPS
social workers said his three children were endangered and seized them. Naulls
and his wife were also charged with felony child endangerment.
The three girls -- ages 1, 3, and 5 -- were held in protective foster care,
with Naulls and his wife only able to see them during a one-hour supervised
visit a week. "My oldest girl thought she was being punished for doing
something wrong," he said. "When we went to visit her, she said, 'Daddy,
we're ready to come home now, we promise to be good.'"
But the Naulls couldn't tell their children the only thing that would comfort
them -- that they would be coming home soon. That would violate CPS regulations
because it might not be true. In fact, it took five weeks of hearings and heartache
before a family court judge decided the children would indeed be safe with their
parents. But the child endangerment charges still stand.
"I was numb, totally flabbergasted, outraged, and left speechless,"
said Naulls. "They told my wife we were endangering the kids because of
the medicine we had in the house, but we only had some in a refrigerator in
the garage that has an alarmed door and my own medicine in a locked container
in my office -- the DEA broke that lock. Would they treat us that way if it
had been prescription Xanax?"
The DEA was not apologetic about its handiwork. A DEA spokesman confirmed that
its people had called CPS. "Any time we do an operation where children
are present, we have a responsibility to call CPS," said Special Agent
Jose Martinez. "But we don't make the decision about whether the children
are endangered."
While it would not discuss particulars of the Naulls case, the Children's Services
Division of the Riverside County Department of Public Social Services, of which
CPS is a part, denies that medical marijuana use or presence is a reason for
removal of children on the filing of endangerment charges.
"Drugs alone does not constitute a reason for removal," said Susan
Lowe, director of the division. "More relevantly, the issue of medical
marijuana does not constitute a reason for us to remove children. There have
to be other issues present that indicate neglect or abuse."
That claim brought a sharp response from Oakland-based attorney James Anthony,
who represented Naulls on land use issues related to his dispensary. While he
supported Lowe's statement of the Riverside County CPS policy, he said it didn’t
reflect reality in the county.
"As a medical cannabis activist attorney and friend of the Naulls family,
I would say that is very good news and seems to reflect a change of position
-- or a position held at the top that has not filtered down yet to the working
staff of CPS," said Anthony. "Riverside County CPS has an alarming
reputation as quick to take children out of medical cannabis households and
to press endangerment charges," he said. "The position the director
laid out is exactly as it should be: medical cannabis is no more relevant to
the best interests of children than any prescription drug -- the California
Supreme Court said as much when it said that medical cannabis is as legal as
any prescription drug," Anthony pointed out.
"In the Naulls case," Anthony continued, "what does the agency
allege is the 'neglect or abuse'? Two loving parents? A nice middle-class home?
Parents who care enough to avail themselves of legal, harmless, medicine to
keep themselves well? The only abuse I'm aware of at the Naulls home was the
abuse done by federal law enforcement when they invaded that home without warning
and heavily armed -- terrorizing those poor children for no reason at all. The
DEA could have called me and I would have advised my client to turn himself
in -- it's not like he was hiding. If CPS wants to charge someone with child
abuse, they should start with the DEA. Under their own standards as described
here, there is no basis to prosecute Anisha Naulls for anything."
If there is any child abuse involved, it is coming from the state, agreed Richard
Wexler, executive director of the National Coalition for Child Protection Reform,
a group concerned with abuses of the child protection system.
"What has been done to these children is government-sanctioned child abuse,"
Wexler said. "Whether one believes what Mr. Naulls did is legal or not,
there is not a shred of evidence that running a medical marijuana co-op harms
children -- and overwhelming evidence that foster care does children enormous
harm," he said.
"The act of removal from everyone loving and familiar can traumatize a
child for life, and the younger the child, the greater the likelihood for such
harm," Wexler continued. "For a young enough child it's an experience
akin to a kidnapping. Children often believe that they have done something terribly
wrong and now they are being punished. That's reflected in one child telling
her father 'Daddy, we're ready to come home now; we promise to be good.' All
that harm occurs even when the foster home is a good one. The majority are.
But several studies suggest that at least one in three foster children is abused
in foster care. So these children have gone from a situation where they clearly
were not abused, into foster care, where the odds are at least one in three
that they will be abused," Wexler said.
"I warn all my dispensary clients that the federal government will try
to capture and imprison you, but it hadn't occurred to me that the government
will also kidnap your children," said Anthony. "It's just unbelievable,
barbaric."
Anthony also works with Green Aid, a group originally set up to support Ed
Rosenthal's legal battles with the feds in Northern California. Green Aid has
set up a Naulls Family Defense Fund to aid the now impoverished family in its
effort to stay together and out of prison.
Sadly, the Naulls are not alone. Veteran activists say child removals by CPS
or the loss of custody battles in California family courts because of medical
marijuana are not uncommon and becoming more frequent.
"Medical cannabis patients and providers getting their kids taken away
is, unfortunately not new," said Angel McLary Raich, who won the first
medical cannabis custody case in California in the wake of Proposition 215.
Despite a variety of debilitating and life-threatening conditions, Raich and
her patient outreach group Angel Wings, have since become a resource for other
medical cannabis community members facing either the child protection bureaucracy
or the vicissitudes of family court in child custody cases.
Raich, who is probably best known as the plaintiff in the Supreme Court's medical
marijuana case, Raich v. Ashcroft, said involvement with medical cannabis as
a factor in either child custody or abuse or endangerment cases is a recurring
problem. "I know of many cases where the kids have been taken away permanently,
others where they have to have supervised visitation."
"We think this kind of thing is horrible," said Noah Mamber, legal
coordinator for Americans for Safe Access (ASA), the medical marijuana defense
group. "Even as we are making progress on the criminal front, with the
cops becoming better educated, as well as other areas like employment and housing,
as the legal intake person for ASA I find myself taking many, many calls where
medical cannabis is an issue for CPS or in family court. I've probably had 30
or 40 in the last couple of years, and those are just the people who call us."
That means there is work to do, activists said. Some are undertaking an educational
process with the family courts and CPS, while others are looking to the legislature
for relief.
"No one seems to understand medical marijuana in this context," said
Mamberg. "There seems to be an unfortunate bias in CPS workers and family
court judges. There are cases where there are no other issues except medical
marijuana, and they will force them to quit taking their medicine if they want
their kids. It is absolutely true that there are cases where patient parents
are being treated unfairly by CPS and the family court system."
"An educational process for the courts and agencies is definitely needed,"
said Anthony. "They can act with the best of intentions, yet wield an incredibly
devastating impact on families because of their lack of knowledge."
Raich pioneered such educational work in Alameda County. The work continues,
she said. "I'm working on training law enforcement and dealing with CPS
and family court," she said. "That's my real passion. I cannot tolerate
watching other people lose their kids over this stuff. It is just so wrong."
If anyone is having problems with CPS or family court over medical marijuana
issues, call her, Raich said. Her number is in the Oakland phone book and contact
information is on her web site.
ASA is working to even the playing field for patients through legislative action,
Mamberg said. "As it is now, family courts and CPS don't seem to be aware
of Prop. 215 and Senate Bill 420, so we need legislation to guide them. We have
drafted a bill that would amend the child protection law so that the medical
marijuana status of a parent cannot be the sole basis for removal of a child,"
he explained. "They need to quit forcing patients to stop taking their
medicine. This measure won't stop CPS from doing its job, but it will stop it
from persecuting medical marijuana patients."
All that is going to take time. In the meantime, said Raich, medical marijuana
patients or providers with children need to play it extremely safe. "Make
sure you're being a good parent," she said. "Make sure your cannabis
is out of reach of the children, make sure your house is clean, there are no
hazards, always plenty of milk and formula on hand. Don't grow in the house,
don't dry in the house, don't have more pot than food in the refrigerator. Take
a parenting class. Know what you need to do. And if the cops come to the door,
don't let them in without a warrant."
As for Ronald Naulls, he's still a bit shell-shocked. "I'm a businessman
and a network engineer. I don't have a criminal record and I don't want to go
to jail. I don't want to have to fight the state to keep my daughters. I'm praying
for God's love, and I ask everyone to pray for me. But this is more than just
about me, this is a fight for the patients and for my family." |