Prepare to be Outraged Tomorrow

Charlie Lynch is a California resident who owned and operated a medical marijuana dispensary that was fully legal under a Golden State law.

In 2007, federal agents and San Luis Obispo sheriffs raided his home and dispensary and in 2008 he was found guilty in federal court of five counts of distributing drugs.

Because he was tried in a federal court, Lynch's defense team was not allowed to argue that its client was fully complying with state law.

On Thursday, April 23, 2009, Lynch is scheduled to be sentenced. He faces a mandatory minimum sentence of five years and, despite some positive statements from the Obama administration's Justice Department about respecting state laws regarding medical marijuana, Lynch's future is darker than midnight. Indeed, the simple letter of the law dictates he go to prison.

The polite term for Lynch's predicament is Kafkaesque. He is a guiltless man who genuinely helped the sick in his community and is being punished for caring. Now he faces at least five years–and potentially much more–in one of the most sickening and barbaric displays of how the drug war is carpet-bombing huge swaths of American life. Indeed, to call Lynch's plight Kafkaesque is to hide the brutality of America's longest-running and most-destructive war behind an aesthetically comforting phrase.

Charlie Lynch's life has been destroyed by policies and priorities so idiotic and corrosive that they create or exacerbate every negative outcome they purport to address. It is the logic of bombing the village in order to save it raised to an exponential degree and all Americans who believe in the smallest doses of freedom, compassion, rule of law, personal autonomy, and federalism should bear witness to the horror of what has already happened and will likely be made still worse on April 23.

Reason has been following Lynch's story since it began. Below is a chronology and selected bibliography of our print and video coverage of Lynch and the monsters who have prosecuted him like some warped Inspector Javert.

Charles Lynch Chronology

April 1, 2006 ... In accordance with state and local law, Charlie Lynch opens Central Coast Compassionate Caregivers medical marijuana dispensary in Morro Bay, California.

March 29, 2007 ... Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) agents and San Luis Obispo County Sheriff deputies raid Lynch's home and dispensary.

April 7, 2007 ... Lynch reopens his dispensary with the blessing of the City of Morro Bay.

April 14, 2007 ... The DEA threatens Lynch's landlord with forfeiture unless he evicts the dispensary.

July 17, 2007 ... Federal agents arrest Charlie Lynch, and charge him with violating federal drug laws. Lynch spends three nights in a federal detention center before being released on $400,000 bail. Lynch is confined to home detention and monitored by federal agents.

June 10, 2008 ... Reason.tv exposes a national audience to the Lynch saga with the documentary short Raiding California: Medical Marijuana and Minors.

July 28, 2008 ... Reason covers day one of U.S. vs. Charles C. Lynch: Entrapment? Lynch Trial Update

July 30, 2008 ... Earthquake in the Courtroom: Lynch Trial Update

July 31, 2008 ... Charlie Takes the Stand: Lynch Trial Update

August 1, 2008 ... Lynch Checked with DEA Before Opening Dispensary: Lynch Trial Update

August 2, 2008 ... The Penultimate Day: Lynch Trial Update

August 4, 2008 ... Waiting for the Jury: Lynch Trial

August 5, 2008 ... Charlie Lynch Found Guilty in Gross Miscarriage of Justice

November 2008 ... Medical marijuana makes conservatives forget federalism

April 20, 2009 ... Obama's DOJ Won't Intervene in Charlie Lynch Case


News Hawk- Ganjarden 420 MAGAZINE ® - Medical Marijuana Publication & Social Networking
Source: Reason Magazine
Author: Nick Gillespie
Contact: Reason Magazine
Copyright: 2009 Reason Magazine
Website: Prepare to be Outraged Tomorrow
 
I've been looking but as of right now no news. Hopefully we will get some good news soon.
 
The judge's decision has at this point, been delayed until June 11, 2009 in federal court in Los Angeles.
 
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