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Medical Marijuana: US 9th Circuit Upholds 10-Year Sentence for Bryan Epis, First California Supplier Tried on Federal Charges

Submitted by Phillip Smith on (Issue #584)
Politics & Advocacy

In an unpublished opinion issued last month, a three-judge panel of the US 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco has upheld the 10-year mandatory minimum federal prison sentence of Bryan Epis, the first medical marijuana supplier prosecuted in federal court after the passage of Proposition 215 in 1996, though not the first convicted.

Bryan Epis reunited with his daughter, Ashley, on being released in 2004 following an initially favorable ruling on medical marijuana by the 9th Circuit
Epis, of Chico, was arrested by Butte County officers in June 1997 and ultimately convicted by a federal jury in 2002 of conspiring to grow more than a thousand marijuana plants. Authorities only seized 458 plants from his home, but presented records suggesting more plants had been grown there.

Epis had a doctor's recommendation to use medical marijuana for chronic back and shoulder pain. He said he was growing for a Chico patients group and admitted selling some plants at cost to co-op members. But federal prosecutors portrayed him as a drug dealer with dollar signs in his eyes.

He and his attorney, Brenda Grantland, appealed the sentence on various grounds, but the three-judge panel didn't go for any of them. Epis had no reason to believe Prop. 215 would shield him from federal law, especially because "a large-scale marijuana operation can have an impact on interstate commerce," they wrote, harking back to the Supreme Court decision in Raich v. Gonzalez that established federal primacy over state law. Epis served a little over two years on his sentence before being released on bail in 2004 as he appealed his case. Grantland will request that his bail be continued pending an appeal to the full 9th Circuit.

Epis supporters expressed shock and outrage at the decision. "This is an egregious miscarriage of justice with no conceivable benefit to the public," said California NORML coordinator Dale Gieringer, "Bryan Epis believed he was acting lawfully. To imprison him for 10 years is the kind of sentence one might expect only from judges who countenance torture," Gieringer added, taking a direct swipe at panel member Judge Jay Bybee, now infamous as one of the authors of the Justice Department memos justifying torture during the Bush administration.

Permission to Reprint: This content is licensed under a modified Creative Commons Attribution license. Content of a purely educational nature in Drug War Chronicle appear courtesy of DRCNet Foundation, unless otherwise noted.

Comments

Anonymous (not verified)

But federal prosecutors portrayed him as a drug dealer... with dollars signs in his eyes?

Fuck me... sounds exactly like uncle scams illegal drug war... with dollar signs in his eyes... 40 billion a year on illegal marijuana prohibition alone!

The drug war, run by drug whores, just keeps on giving! Fucking criminals and hypocrites... when will we hold them all accountable for their perjurys and false witnesses.

Even if we released all those being illegally detained on victimless charges we would probably still have to build more prisons to hold all the prohibitionist and gov't criminals that will need to be imprisoned for prosecuting this war for the past 70+ years.

Fri, 05/08/2009 - 2:43pm Permalink
Anonymous (not verified)

Dear Senator Feinstein,

I am forwarding you my response to Chico News and Review regarding Bryan Epis' appeal being set back.

http://www.newsreview.com/chico/content?oid=976375

The question at the bottom was rhetorical, but now I am specifically asking YOU:

Bryan Epis was railroaded in a Kangaroo Court with prosecutorial fantasies about a [now "missing"] spreadsheet being a plan to conspire to grow more than 1000 cannabis plants.

In about 2 hours I am going to drive up to Oaksterdam and charge about $800 worth of high grade cannabis bud on my Master Card.

>>Please explain why Epis hasn't yet been issued an apology and restitution for the obscenities he has already endured in this abominable abortion of justice?

-Richard Paul Steeb, San Jose California

Seriously.

Sat, 05/09/2009 - 12:38pm Permalink

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