Checking Bonnie's Facts: Was The D.A. Leveling With Us At Her News Conference?

Jim Finnel

Fallen Cannabis Warrior & Ex News Moderator
After the Sept. 9 raids on 14 medical cannabis dispensaries, District Attorney Bonnie Dumanis issued a press release gloating about how she shut down the operations of “drug dealers.” Yet, Dumanis provided very little evidence to back up her blanket claims. CityBeat presents this fact check:

Claim No.1: The dispensaries “were operating under the guise of selling marijuana and marijuana-laced products for medicinal purposes.”

According to eight search-warrant affidavits filed in state court and two filed in federal court by the officers leading the stings, in no case did a dispensary distribute marijuana to a client without the required medical doctor’s recommendation. However, 14 tablets of MD*MT, aka Ecst*asy, were seized from the home of two dispensary operators—Jovan Jackson and Lee Bumpers of Answerdam Rx. Human-growth hormones were also found at the home of Joseph Nunes of Green Kross Collective, the U.S. Attorney’s office told The San Diego Union-Tribune.

Claim No. 2: “Residents living near some of the storefronts have complained to law enforcement and local government about an increase in crimes associated with the dispensaries—including robberies and vandalism.”

Using the San Diego Regional Justice Information Systems—an online service that records and maps all criminal complaints—CityBeat searched for vandalism (often classi afied as “malicious mischief”) and robberies within a quarter-mile of each dispensary and found no significant change in crime. For example, Total Herbal Care’s ’hood (4600 block of Cass Street), saw a drop from 11 vandalism cases and three robberies to three cases of vandalism and two robberies between July and September. The 3500 block of Ashford Street, home of Nature’s Rx, saw three cases of vandalism and no robberies in the beginning of the year but zero cases of either crime between April and September.

Claim No. 3: “As a result of the search warrants, law enforcement seized marijuana at each location, more than $70,000 in cash and six guns.”

CityBeat reviewed eight seizure receipts filed with the central branch of the Superior Court and found that police did seize the entire stock of cannabis products. Yet, there was nowhere near that amount of cash on hand. In total, those eight only accounted for $10,485 in cash, less than 15 percent of the purported total. As the Union-Tribune reported, $38,000, the majority of the money, was confiscated from a single dispensary owner, Nunes of Green Kross Collective. No guns were confiscated as a result of the eight search warrants filed in Superior Court.


NewsHawk: User: 420 MAGAZINE ® - Medical Marijuana Publication & Social Networking
Source: sdcitybeat.com
Author: Dave Maass
Copyright: 2009 SAN DIEGO CITYBEAT
Contact: San Diego CityBeat - Dave Maass
Website: San Diego CityBeat - Checking Bonnie's facts
 
Go get em.

They are DEFINITELY not used to being fact-checked like this. It simply does not happen. Get this in the papers, local newspaper website especially, and this WILL force a change in, at the least, their disinformation. Hold their feet to the fire and document the fact checking thoroughly. But it isn't enough to say it - they need to show it as well. Clips showing them lying, and documents proving they lied - with links on the website. Just the text of the story is not enough.

The people this sort of fact checking is meant to persuade are persudable, but they remain highly skeptical. This needs to be 100% transparent and irrefutable in order to convince persuadable voters and go beyond the Alternative and younger crowd this website/paper is pitched at.
 
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