GUIDE TO WEED LAND Website: www.weedlandbook.com Email for Peter Hecht: [email protected] Telephone: 916-955-4430, cell; 916-326-5539, office SUMMARY OF THE BOOK Weed Land, Inside America’s Marijuana Epicenter and How Pot Went Legit (University of California Press, 2014) is a work of narrative journalism that chronicles a transformative era for marijuana in California that stoked pot liberalization across much of America. The book spans an epoch that begins with the early days of the AIDS crisis in San Francisco. Its story extends through California’s passage of the nation’s first medical marijuana law in 1996, through federal and state raids on medical cannabis providers and through the emergence of a burgeoning marijuana industry in the late 2000s. It tracks an historic move to legalize pot for recreational use, a sweeping law enforcement backlash and, ultimately, potential landmark concessions for ending marijuana prohibition in America. Weed Land is not an advocacy work for marijuana liberalization or drug enforcement policies. It instead tracks a remarkable evolution for marijuana in politics, law, medicine, business and popular culture through up-close stories that focus on people and places in California, the birthplace of the medical marijuana movement and the modern cannabis economy. The book can be broken down by chapters for study and analysis on themes, locales and characters presented in the story. Chapter notes provide source materials. Rather than taking a strict, linear approach to this period in history, Weed Land explores overlapping factors in the marijuana phenomenon in the first nine chapters as it builds towards ultimate confrontations and resolutions. The first chapter, The Way It Was Supposed to Be, on a 2002 DEA raid on a Santa Cruz marijuana garden for the severely ill, prepares the reader for contrasts to follow as the cannabis industry grows and its politics evolve. From there, Oaksterdam, set in Oakland, presents the political nerve center of the cannabis movement. The third chapter, Kush Rush reveals the migratory nexus for cannabis in California’s north coast Emerald Triangle. Reefer Research, set in San Francisco, tells of medical cannabis research inspired by young men suffering from AIDS who turned to marijuana for relief. And The Pot Docs, unfolding from Sacramento to the boardwalk of Los Angeles’ Venice Beach, reveals cannabis physicians who became conduits for the new marijuana economy. The sixth chapter, L.A. Excess, set in Los Angeles, chronicles challenges of exploding cannabis commerce. Wafting Widely offers a statewide narrative on medical marijuana’s impact on popular culture. Courting Compassion, set in San Diego, shows how marijuana advocates and defendants impacted the legal system. And the ninth chapter, Martyrdom for the Missionaries, set in California’s Sierra Nevada, follows a legal saga that spans much of the life of the California cannabis movement. The Weed Land story notably accelerates, and characters reemerge, in Campaign for Cannabis. The chronicle of the Proposition 19 marijuana legalization campaign – presented in Chapter Ten - begins to set up the coming clash over federal marijuana authority that will lead to the book’s conclusion. The eleventh chapter, A Mile High and Beyond, set in Colorado, shows how the Golden State’s marijuana experiment is overtaken elsewhere and signals peril over California’s failure to regulate the vast industry it birthed. Cultivating Trouble, set in Oakland and other California towns that bet on cannabis, reveals an overreach that infuriated the feds. Return of the Feds chronicles the inevitable crackdown. Ultimately, Back to the Garden, the fourteenth chapter and epilogue, wraps up the story by returning to the pot garden in Santa Cruz and reflecting on the evolutionary change that has occurred. DECONSTRUCTING WEED LAND Outline by chapters and key characters CHAPTER ONE: The Way It Was Supposed to Be Theme: The story of the raid by federal Drug Enforcement Administration agents on a garden for seriously and terminally ill medical marijuana patients sets up contradictions of the marijuana epoch to come. The raid in the Santa Cruz Mountains stirs national awareness over medical marijuana. It draws compassion for people using cannabis to alleviate suffering and provokes anger over heavy-handed tactics by law enforcement. The events lead to state legislation to protect rights of sick people to collectively cultivate and share marijuana. Yet the notion of compassionate, collective cultivation begins to morph into a billion dollar industry bearing little resemblance to the small cannabis colony in Santa Cruz. Key characters: - Valerie Corral: Seizure patient, co-founder of the Wo/Men’s Alliance for Medical Marijuana and a woman who becomes known as the Mother Teresa for the marijuana movement. - Mike Corral: Valerie’s husband and co-founder of the Wo/Men’s Alliance for Medical Marijuana. - Patrick Kelly: The commander of the DEA raid and former Marine Corps captain on his first assignment after completing a special detail as an air marshal defending against terrorism after 9/11. - Suzanne Pfeil: Polio patient and medical marijuana user who alerts the cannabis community and news media about the raid. CHAPTER TWO: Oaksterdam Theme: The intersecting life stories of three unlikely protagonists in the California medical marijuana movement weave a narrative about a place – Oakland – that becomes the political nerve center for pot’s legalization and a nexus for the commercialization of cannabis. Key characters: - Richard Lee: A paralyzed ex-rock and roll roadie and former ultra-light pilot from Houston. He founds the Oaksterdam university marijuana trades school and challenges skeptical medical cannabis advocates by bankrolling an effort to legalize marijuana as a recreational drug. - Jeff Jones: A clean-cut newcomer from South Dakota who establishes the Oakland Cannabis Buyers Cooperative with memories of a father who died of cancer. He brings a landmark challenge to the United States Supreme Court over federal intolerance for medical marijuana. - Steve DeAngelo: A flamboyant transplant from Washington D.C. who founds the Harborside Health Center and builds it into the largest marijuana dispensary in the world as he markets medical marijuana as a “wellness” drug for daily living. CHAPTER THREE: Kush Rush Theme: The growing marijuana economy fuels a new cannabis migration to California and a cultural clash in the Golden State’s most renowned pot growing region: the north coast Emerald Triangle once settled by ‘60’s hippie homesteaders out of San Francisco’s Summer of Love. The new economics of weed challenge a place where logging and salmon industries vanish and family livelihoods and the regional well-being increasingly depend on marijuana. Key characters: - Stephen Gasparas: A wannabe marijuana grower from suburban Chicago drawn to the cannabis wonderland of Humboldt County. - Mendocino County Sheriff Tom Allman: A former student body president from southern Humboldt, Allman seeks to distinguish legitimate growers from audacious profiteers as cannabis growing overwhelms his county. - Joey Burger: Humboldt-born marijuana grower who wants to bring a long illicit cannabis culture into the light as a sanctioned industry. -Matthew Cohen: The model grower for Mendocino’s unique cannabis regulation program and an advocate who envisions a future in which Mendocino and Humboldt become pot’s tourism equal of nearby wine counties of Napa and Sonoma. CHAPTER FOUR: Reefer Research Theme: A drop back in time to the early days of the California medical marijuana movement recalls the AIDS crisis in San Francisco and the work of determined medical researchers seeking to find a cure. As thousands of young men wasting away from illness turn to cannabis to alleviate their symptoms, doctors face government resistance to research into marijuana’s medical efficacy. Ultimately, a breakthrough clinical trial in San Francisco shows promising benefits for pot and leads to a new generation of medical marijuana research. Key characters: - Dr. Donald Abrams: An openly gay doctor at San Francisco General Hospital and a leading AIDS researcher, whose lover is dying of the disease, leads the fight for medical marijuana studies. - Researchers for Center for Medicinal Cannabis Research: University of California medical scientists, led by University of California San Diego neuropsychiatrist Dr. Igor Grant, who conduct unprecedented state-funded clinical trials into pot’s medical benefits. Chapter Five: The Pot Docs Theme: The growth of the modern marijuana economy is enabled by medical marijuana physicians capitalizing on fortunes to be made from writing “recommendations” to people seeking legal protection to use cannabis for conditions from severe to benign. Key characters: - Dr. David Allen: A former star heart surgeon from Mississippi who comes to Sacramento to become a California marijuana doctor, only to be hunted down by eager narcotics officers back home. - Dr. Marcus Conant: A respected AIDS physician from San Francisco who risks federal prosecution in a legal fight to win the rights for physicians to recommend marijuana as medicine. - Dr. Tod Mikuryia: A former government research psychiatrist who becomes the “doctor of last resort” for medical cannabis patients. He drafts an enduring list of more than 250 conditions for which marijuana is said to provide relief. - The Medical Kush Doctor: With carnival barkers and hash bars partnering with doctors, the physician clinics on the boardwalk of Venice Beach accelerate California’s wild medical marijuana marketplace. CHAPTER SIX: L.A. Excess Theme: With neon pot signs, fragrant vapor rooms and Hollywood sizzle, hundreds of marijuana stores transform the landscape of Los Angeles, stirring unfathomed challenges in America’s second largest metropolis. Key characters: - Yamileth “Yami” Bolanos: Liver transplant recipient, operator of the Pure Life Alternative Wellness Center and a fiery voice for cannabis patients at Los Angeles City Hall. - Carmen Trutanich: A pugnacious city attorney leading efforts to shutter marijuana stores. - Brad Barnes: A former porn star known as “Brick Majors” who opens a medical marijuana dispensary as the newest feature at his San Fernando Valley adult entertainment complex. CHAPTER SEVEN: Wafting Widely Theme: The emergence of the medical marijuana economy stirs a new cultural wave for pot. As Californians consume 16 million ounces of weed a year, marijuana is hyped as both a healing medicine and a pleasurable pursuit. Pot changes political attitudes and the social dynamic. Key characters: - Dragonfly de la Luz (Stephanie Taylor): A cannabis reviewer for marijuana magazines, she celebrates purely recreational rewards of marijuana through her “Getting High with Dragonfly” pot strain critiques and persona as “the ganja princess.” - Lanette and Bryan Davis: Owners of Christian-run Canna Care dispensary in Sacramento, they serve up buds with Bibles and underscore a broadening acceptance for medical cannabis. - The 420 Nurses and the Hot Kush Girls: Cannabis trade show darlings reveal marijuana marijuana’s commercial marketing less as healing medicine than as a party option for healthy young dudes. CHAPTER EIGHT: Courting Compassion Theme: Media-savvy cannabis advocates and court defendants impact the legal process and begin to outflank authorities by shaping public opinion with stories framed in compassionate narratives about sick people, lives and spirits lifted by medical marijuana. Key characters: - Eugene Davidovich: Former U.S. Navy petty officer who turns to social media and nightly webcasts to challenge authorities prosecuting him for illegal marijuana sales, while assailing a San Diego crackdown on medical marijuana patients and providers. - Ed Rosenthal: Author and cannabis growing guru whose federal conviction provokes a jurors’ revolt after they realize he was cultivating marijuana for medical use. - Patrick Kevin Kelly: Unlikely legal hero for the cannabis movement whose appeal of his conviction for seven backyard pot plants prompts the Supreme Court of California to throw out state-mandated cultivation limits. CHAPTER NINE: Martyrdom for the Missionaries Theme: The 14-year-saga and ultimate federal prosecution of Sierra Nevada cannabis physician Dr. Mollie Fry and lawyer husband Dale Schafer haunts the medical marijuana movement and reignites fears of sustained federal raids on “God’s medicine.” Key characters: - Dr. Marion P. “Mollie” Fry: Breast cancer survivor and medical marijuana physician. - Dale Schafer: Husband caregiver and cannabis advocate. - El Dorado County detective Robert Ashworth: Narcotics investigator who wins the couple’s trust as he directs probe against them. - Michael Harvey: Beleaguered house guest of Fry and Schafer who becomes a reluctant government witness in United States District Court. CHAPTER TEN: Campaign for Cannabis Theme: An upstart campaign to legalize marijuana in California for adult recreational use roils divisions in the medical marijuana community, triggers concerns of the United States Justice Department and ignites an all-out fight for the endorsement of a dead man. Key characters: - Richard Lee: Founder of Oaksterdam University and chief funder of the Proposition 19 campaign. - Jeff Jones: Protagonist in failed U.S. Supreme Court challenge over medical marijuana, cosponsor of Proposition 19. - Dale Sky Jones, Jeff Jones’ wife: Polished corporate marketing executive who becomes the face of the campaign. - Dan Rush: Powerful California union organizer who embraces Proposition 19 and marijuana cause as fertile ground for creating a unionized pot work force. - Dragonfly de la Luz: Ganja princess who emerges to lead celebrated political revolt, Stoners Against Proposition 19. - The late Jack Herer: Famed cannabis author and advocate whose death stirs bitter dispute over how he would have viewed the initiative. - Eric Holder: The attorney general of the United States who notably weighs in on the California ballot measure. CHAPTER ELEVEN: A Mile High and Beyond Theme: States across America build upon the California medical marijuana experiment. Colorado creates an unabashedly for-profit, regulated state medical marijuana industry, surpassing California by licensing cannabis businesses and establishing potential protections to ward off federal raids. California advocates stumble in efforts to draft rules for the Golden State’s vast cannabis landscape. Key characters: - Dan Rogers: Former banking executive travels to Oaksterdam University in Oakland for higher education on the business of cannabis, then returns home to cash in on Colorado’s booming state-regulated marijuana industry. - Matt Cook: Ex-cop from Colorado Springs who brings Republicans and Democrats together on unprecedented legislation to issue state licenses to Colorado pot workers and meticulously oversee cultivation and sales. - Dale Gieringer: Veteran California marijuana legalization advocate. While seeing Colorado’s rules as onerous intrusions on pot liberties, he warns that the Golden State needs cannabis industry oversight to avoid federal enforcement actions. CHAPTER TWELVE: Cultivating Trouble Theme: Mounting concerns over Proposition 19 and continuing plans by the city of Oakland to license cavernous indoor farms to produce medical marijuana for California consumers stir concerns at the United States Justice Department that America’s largest cannabis economy is out of control and needs reigning in. Key characters: - John Russo: Oakland city attorney who warns City Council members their commercial cannabis ambitions threaten a fragile federal truce over medical marijuana. - Yan Ebyam: A mysterious Oakland entrepreneur who sets out on an ambitious business scheme for wholesale production of pharmaceutical grade cannabis. - Thomas and David Jopson: Two rural farmers in Northern California who see converting their heirloom tomato greenhouses to pot production as a ticket to gilded retirements. - Isleton: A small, struggling town on the Sacramento River Delta that seizes upon a medical marijuana cultivation scheme as a civic option for economic salvation. CHAPTER THIRTEEN: Return of the Feds Theme: Federal authorities launch sweeping raids and prosecutions against California cannabis businesses and icons of the medical marijuana movement. Key characters: - California’s four United States attorneys: Benjamin Wagner, Melinda Haag, Andre Birotte Jr. and Laura Duffy. - Mendocino County Sheriff Tom Allman. - Matt Cohen: Mendocino cannabis grower and regulation advocate. - Richard Lee of Oaksterdam University and Proposition 19. - Steve DeAngelo of the Harborside Health Center, the world’s largest dispensary. CHAPTER FOURTEEN: Back to the Garden Theme: As voters in Colorado and Washington approve historic legalization of marijuana for purely recreational use, the feds offer potentially landmark terms of concession. A way of life remains unchanged in the communal garden of the Wo/Men’s Alliance for Medical Marijuana in Santa Cruz. A small group of sick and dying people, long ago raided by heavily-armed federal agents, continue to cultivate marijuana and share the medicine. A reflection on the seismic change in the cannabis landscape offers an epilogue on leading characters in the book.
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