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Associated Press,
November 9th, 2007 -
A grand jury has refused to indict a man police suspected was making
hashish or hash oil from his medical marijuana.
The arrest of Anthony Beasley, 28, in October caused anger among some
residents of Keizer. His 24-plant garden abutted a parking lot at McNary
High School.
Beasley was evicted from the rental property the day of his arrest.
Police said they found PVC pipes in his home with a concentrate of
marijuana, leading them to believe he was producing hashish, or hash oil.
He told police he was extracting the active ingredient of marijuana,
known by the initials THC.
The grand jury considered a felony charge of manufacturing a
controlled substance within 1,000 feet of a school.
Its refusal means the case is all but dead, said Marion County Deputy
District Attorney Courtland Geyer.
But he said prosecutors believe that distilling hash oil from
marijuana is illegal, even for medical users.
"It would be a very bad mistake to interpret the result of this case
as some broad declaration statewide of legality," Geyer said. "We
have
other indictments on this issue in Marion County, and we will continue to
prosecute."
A lawyer who specializes in medical marijuana cases said the outcome
was not surprising, and police bias against the legal users doesn't change
the fact that the medical uses are legal.
"The grand jury was instituted as a civilian bulwark against
out-of-control, executive authority as a protection," said Leland Berger,
who didn't represent Beasley in the case. "When it issues a 'not true
bill,' it's performing that historic function."
Keizer police Capt. Jeff Kuhns said the state's medical marijuana law
is vague.
"There are people who have dug their heels in on both sides of this,"
Kuhns said. "I think the Legislature or whoever, needs to take a look
at
this law and better define some areas, this being one of them." |