"This is an injustice and I think everyone has gotten the message."
Charlie Lynch is the medical marijuana dispensary owner whose
business, fully legal under California state law, was raided by
federal agents in 2007. Lynch was charged with five counts of
violating federal drug laws. He faced as many as 100 years in
prison, but on his June 11, 2009 sentencing date many expected the
mandatory-minimum five-year sentence.
Although the fact that Lynch was prosecuted at all is an affront to
anyone who believes in the 10th Amendment or the efficacy of
medical marijuana, Lynch and his attorneys were relieved with the
366-day sentence delivered by U.S. District Court Judge George Wu.
Lynch is free pending appeal, and his attorneys are hopeful he can
avoid prison entirely. If he is imprisoned, the actual time he
would spend behind bars would likely be about four months.
Defense attorney Reuven Cohen expects that his client will be
among the last dispensary owners prosecuted in our nation's failed
war on drugs. "I really think," says Cohen, "you're looking at, if
not the last, then the penultimate or third to last medical
marijuana dispensary prosecution in the United States....This is an
injustice, and I think everyone has gotten the message."
This video update is approximately three minutes. Produced by Ted
Balaker; shot by Alex Manning and Paul Detrick.
The reason.tv documentary short, "Raiding California," which
brought the Lynch case to a national audience, is here.
Reason's coverage of the Lynch saga is here.
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