Problematic Pipe

420 Warrior

Well-Known Member
A Man Faces DUI, Paraphernalia Charges After a Tpd Officer Allegedly Ignores the Man's MMJ Card

A few days before Christmas, Tom Cadamagnani decided to help a friend who was down on her luck. The former Marine and his friend jumped in his truck and headed for the Salvation Army to get some presents for her grandkids.

They never got there.

A Tucson police officer stopped Cadamagnani, 50, on Dec. 20 for a minor registration glitch, saw a pipe in his truck, and cited the medical-marijuana patient for an expired registration, DUI and possession of drug paraphernalia. The expired registration was a record-keeping glitch that has since been cleared up, Cadamagnani said.

He admitted smoking one hit of MMJ-more than six hours before he was pulled over. He said he failed a field-sobriety test because he has a detached meniscus and torn ligaments in his knee-the exact reason he has the MMJ card in the first place. He is awaiting a knee replacement and uses MMJ in lieu of painkillers that were attacking his liver.

I spoke with Tucson Police Department Sgt. Maria Hawke about department policies.

There was no mention of an MMJ card, which Cadamagnani said he presented, in Officer David Danielson's report. The TPD procedure for such cases is clear, said Hawke: When a medical-marijuana patient presents a card, the arresting officer is to call the TPD records section to confirm the information.

"If the officer failed to include it in his report, or didn't follow procedures as far as verifying it, then that would be dealt with internally," she said.

If Cadamagnani presented an MMJ card, then the pipe charge was not appropriate, Hawke said.

Cadamagnani wonders why Officer Danielson even ran his license plate. The tags were current, and the officer's report mentions no moving violation or other illegal traffic moves.

"He called it a random registration check. I thought I was completely legal," Cadamagnani said.

He tells this tale: The trouble started when Danielson walked up to the car, and Cadamagnani was opening the door to talk, because his window doesn't work. The officer tersely told him to stay in the car, and immediately asked if Cadamagnani had just come from buying meth, had been using meth, or had any in the car. Danielson then asked if he could search the car. Only then did he ask for a driver's license, which Cadamagnani gave him.

Then, Cadamagnani, whose father had died a month earlier, started to tear up. He's broke; it's Christmas; his dad just died; and now he is getting a ticket for a pipe he thought was legal because of his MMJ card.

"Then all of a sudden, because I was crying, ( the officer ) says, 'Is something wrong with you, sir? Have you been drinking?'" Cadamagnani said.

In a report written after the incident, Danielson relates his suspicion. Cadamagnani got upset and pleaded with the officer not to give him a ticket. "Thomas appeared to be very jumpy which made me feel either he was under the influence of something or hiding something in the vehicle that he did not want me to find," Danielson wrote.

Fearing the situation could escalate, Danielson called for a backup officer. A second officer arrived and waited with Cadamagnani while Danielson wrote the citations in his squad car. From the car, Danielson again noted Cadamagnani was crying in his truck.

"I felt he could possibly be under the influence of unknown substance due him ( sic ) having an un-normal ( sic ) behavior," Danielson wrote in the report.

Then the officer told Cadamagnani that if he refused a field-sobriety test, he would take him to jail.

"So I thought I would try," he said. He failed.

Since December, Cadamagnani has been waiting for results of a blood test. His public defender, Cynthia Richardson, has so far declined her client's requests to ask for a dismissal of the case. He thinks he was targeted and harassed because he fit a stereotypical tweaker profile-a white guy with a shaved head in a beater vehicle.

There are always two sides, and I haven't heard the entire TPD side. All I have are police reports and breath tests showing a 0.00 blood-alcohol level. It seems like Officer Danielson overreacted. No, the MMJ statute doesn't protect patients from arrest for paraphernalia. No, the paraphernalia statute doesn't make an exception for MMJ patients, even though Hawke said the charge may not have been appropriate.

Police officers use discretion every day, and this looks like a case of poor discretion.

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News Hawk - 420 Warrior 420 MAGAZINE
Location: Tucson, AZ
Source: Tucson Weekly
Author: J. M. Smith
Contact: mailbag@tucsonweekly.com
Copyright: 2012 Tucson Weekly
Website: www.tucsonweekly.com
 
poor guy
 
cops are such dikheads in america , thats why i moved out of the states, first to costa rica, and now i live in colombia...this kinda of crap would never happen here
 
He should have refused consent to search. never never never ever consent, make them work for it by getting a warrant.
 
He should have refused consent to search. never never never ever consent, make them work for it by getting a warrant.

Old Red,
I agree about NEVER GIVE CONSENT, EVER !!!
However the police officer noticed his pipe in the ashtray, automatically giving the police permission through " probable cause ".
Do not leave anything out where it can be seen or smelled by the police..
 
I agree, but, His med card should have trumped probable cause.
 
I've never started crying after being pulled over - but I have started shaking uncontrollably a time or two. Probably a leftover reaction from driving the first part of my adult life with no driver's license, lol (it was never suspended, I just didn't bother to get it... for years :dumbass: ). I know what it is like for such a reaction to promote suspicion on the part of LEO. Sad, but sometimes people who really are criminals break down upon being pulled over, so I don't blame the officer for wondering if something was going on.

I do blame him for disregarding the man's medicinal-use cannabis certificate. Honestly, I see that as nothing less than wasting police resources - whatever the person had to go through to get that part of things cleared up, I would assume that the arresting officer had to appear in court, fill out paperwork, et cetera. That's waste. Additionally, if a situation arising from a LEO ignoring a person's documentation ended with that officer - as an employee of the city/county/state - and his office having to pay a settlement due to rights violations or other reason... That would be waste exponentially. Therefore, such things should be disciplined to the same extent that the officer would be disciplined if he/she was caught wasting jurisdictional resources in some other way - also with the additional potential for liability later. IOW, this aspect of things should be treated as a serious issue and not simply laughed off and forgotten. IMHO.
 
"Government Waste" is NEVER laughable TS...It's ALWAYS tragic!

In this time of economic disparity, with everything going up in price but our pay checks (If your lucky enough to get one?) One cent more, being spent needlessly, is one cent too many! It's totally inexcusable to waste, much needed revenue at this point in time! IMHO!?
 
people don't even realize, their paycheck is actually getting smaller each week, they think prices are going up, in actuality, the unbacked dollar is becoming more and more worthless by the day. we are all "SLAVES" time to wake up America, start kicking DC's ass. we need something like "the million man march" on DC. Demand our God given rights stop being violated, return to a system where the people control the government instead of big intrests and big money. funny, most of the highest paying political jobs were originally "volunteer" positions. or very minimal wage. aren't employees supposed to ask the boss for a raise, or at least be expected to earn raises through "merit"? These treasonous idiots tell "We the People" how much we have to pay them to represent corporate America instead of us, and on top of that they somehow got the belief that they have the authority to control our personal liberties, God given rights and consumption habits.
All that being said, We have to pick our battles, right now,
"LEGALIZE" God's gift to all Mankind. Do not give up until we win!!


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people don't even realize, their paycheck is actually getting smaller each week, they think prices are going up,


Happens every time the government decrees that minimum wage will go up - the people making minimum seem to lose a little bit as basic needs increase to reflect their additional costs (plus always a little bit more), people who were making a little over minimum wage are now making the new minimum, and everyone else who's making the same that they were before are also seeing that their expenses have gone up.

funny, most of the highest paying political jobs were originally "volunteer" positions. or very minimal wage.

The highest political offices were once staffed by people who were rather wealthy (in terms of the time). An imperfect solution, as they aren't exactly a true representative of the population that they're governing. Now, many are wealthy as well, though.
 
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