Apparently nostalgic for the bad old days of pot paraphernalia raids, our law enforcement friends down in San Diego have taken time off from pursuing what seem to be less pressing matters -- like, you know, murder and rape and stuff -- to bust four smoke shops for selling marijuana pipes.
San Diego Police Department Captain Miguel Rosario of the narcotics division claimed the raids, which happened on June 18, came in response to "numerous citizen complaints" and subsequent police investigations in which "underage operatives" purchased paraphernalia at the shops in early June.
"Our approach is when the community says there is a problem, we've
always been a very responsive police department," Rosario told the
Peninsula Beacon. "We're going to respond when we get complaints that any type of crime is occurring."
The
stores raided were Freak Factory in Mission Beach, 420 Smoke Shop in
Ocean Beach, Smoke-n-Stuff in Mission Valley, and Up In Smoke in the
College Area. The clerks on duty in the shops received misdemeanor
charges and could face up to six months in jail, a $1,000 fine, and
forfeiture of paraphernalia items, according to Kristine Lorenzo of the
San Diego City Attorney's Office advisory division.
Capt.
Rosario said police seized items that are illegal to sell and possess
according to California Health and Safety Code Section 11364.7,
including marijuana pipes, bongs, and even grinders used to separate
stems and seeds from marijuana.
"If it's illegal we take it," Rosario said, adding: "[Citizens] feel that when they sell paraphernalia it brings in clientele that are involved in the smoking of marijuana and that brings crime.That's the perception."
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| sandiego.gov |
| San Diego City Atty. Jan Goldsmith wants your bong |
Rosario's
marijuana fixation and the raids themselves represent an apparent
hardening of attitudes on the part of the SDPD under new City Attorney
Jan Goldsmith, a retired superior court judge who assumed the office of
city attorney in December 2008.
In November
2007, Goldsmith's predecessor, Mike Aguirre, had
sent letters to head shop owners warning them to stop selling anything
that could be classified as "drug paraphernalia" under California law
(which technically defines drug paraphernalia as anything that can be
used to consume drugs). But Aguirre then tried to "clarify" and soften
the letter, saying he was only going after materials used to smoke
"hard" drugs like crack cocaine or methamphetamines, rather than
marijuana.
Aguirre continued to draw that
distinction in April 2008, referring to how he was going after shops
"selling paraphernalia for these hard drugs." He also pointed out that
many of the shops receiving letters had stopped selling meth and crack
pipes voluntarily.
But Dr. Cleo Malone, who until his death in December ran the drug rehabilitation center Palavra Tree -- funded in part by
San Diego County -- told San Diego's
Last Blog On Earth that he saw no real difference between marijuana and hard
drugs, and he looked forward to closing down all the head shops in San
Diego.
So, with Goldsmith's ascendancy to city
attorney, has Dr. Malone's hard-line attitude (totally unsupported by
science, if that matters) towards marijuana become the official policy
of the San Diego Police Department? It sure looks that way.
Or maybe they really are still just steamed about losing that Supreme Court decision.