Lost Password?
No account yet? Register
Shore Line Realty www.shorelineatthelake.com
Dr. Bonner Optometry 994-1488
www.goldenfishbooks.com

Games

Arcade
Sudoku
Lepp sentenced to 10 years in federal prison for marijuana case PDF Print E-mail
Written by Elizabeth Larson   
Monday, 18 May 2009
THIS STORY HAS BEEN UPDATED.


UPPER LAKE – A local man known for his medical marijuana activism has been sentenced to a 10-year federal prison sentence.


Charles “Eddy” Lepp, 56, was sentenced Monday morning by Judge Marilyn Hall Patel to two 10-year sentences, which will run concurrently, according to spokesman Jack Gillund of the US Attorney's Office. Patel said the sentences were the mandatory minimum required by law.


“It's tragic,” said Lepp's attorney, Michael Hinckley.


Last September a federal jury convicted Lepp of conspiracy to possess with the intent to distribute and cultivation of more than 1,000 marijuana plants, as Lake County News has reported.


The jury found that Lepp had grown 24,784 marijuana plants on his 20-acre property in Upper Lake, which is adjacent to Highway 20. He was indicted in 2004 in the case, which resulted from an investigation conducted by the Drug Enforcement Administration and the sheriff's offices of Lake and Sonoma counties.


During his hour-long hearing, Lepp also was sentenced to five years of supervised release once his sentence ends.


Hinckley said that as she imposed the sentence, Patel herself stated that she believed the minimum sentence was “excessive.”


“It's way, way, way too much time,” Hinckley said.


Lepp was sentenced on the same day as the US Supreme Court declined to hear San Diego County v. San Diego NORML et al., according to California NORML. By not hearing the case, an appeals court ruling that holds that California law trumps federal law over medical marijuana will remain in place.


Patel commented during sentencing that Lepp seemed proud of what he was doing. Hinckley said Lepp did testify in the trial about being proud of the fields where the marijuana was grown, and he encouraged people to take advantage of the opportunity to grow there.


“I've never seen a man work harder to get time in prison than Mr. Lepp,” federal prosecutor David Hall is reported to have remarked during the sentencing.


Lepp must surrender himself to federal authorities on July 6.


He told Lake County News in a weekend interview, “At my time in life if all I get sentenced to is a 10-year minimum, that's a friggin' life sentence.”


Lepp was the first person in California to be acquitted in a Proposition 215 prosecution in 1996, as Lake County News has reported.


On Monday, Lepp pointed to other medical marijuana growers who have gotten deals with the government for far lesser prison terms. “I got 10 years and everybody else is getting virtually nothing.”


Hinckley said he's filing an appeal of both the sentence and the original conviction.


He said they had hoped to get underneath the mandatory minimum 10-year sentence through a “safety valve” provision, which has five elements that must be met.


Hinckley said the government argued that Lepp didn't meet two of the requirements. Those include being the leader or organizer of a criminal activity. “Our position was, that Eddy is the leader of the church,” said Hinckley. “The 'criminal activity' that they're talking about is the growing of the marijuana in the fields.”


The other requirement the government alleged Lepp didn't qualify for was that he didn't meet with the government and truthfully speak about the offense for which he's been convicted.


Hall had alleged that Lepp lied on the stand when he maintained he had not been active in running the marijuana garden, which was part of his Rastafarian religious ministry.


“He would need to admit he lied at trial,” said Hinckley.


Lepp said he met with Hall several weeks ago and was told he would need to say he lied on the stand in order to qualify for the government to drop the minimum sentence. “I went ballistic,” Lepp said.


He maintained that he had 200 volunteers that ran the garden. “I never had anything to do with it,” he said, noting that Hall accused him of being a criminal mastermind.


Lepp had been looking at a maximum sentence of life in prison on both counts, plus a $4 million fine.


“We asked that no fine be ordered because of his ability to pay,” said Hinckley.


The fine was waived, but a forfeiture action against the fields where the marijuana was being grown is still working its way through the courts, Lepp said.


An investigation conducted by the Mendocino County Sheriff's Office last week resulted in Lepp's home being raided by officials, who detained him and four other people, while they searched the house and took hundreds of pictures. Lepp said no search warrant was issued and no one was arrested after being handcuffed and held.


Lepp alleges that the sheriff's deputies came to his home by mistake, but there were concerns that there was going to be an attempt to tie that case to his current situation.


Rachel Cohen, Lepp's personal assistant said the courtroom was filled for the hour-long sentencing, with people spilling out into the hallway.


She said people were carrying signs and picketing at the courthouse, with many people showing support for Lepp. Cohen said they also were passing out “Free Eddy Lepp” buttons.


Lepp said now that he has been sentenced, he has many friends and supporters who are working to get him a topnotch appellate lawyer.


While he prepares to enter prison, Lepp said he's concerned about his daughter, who has had benign polyps found on her thyroid. It's especially worrying because her mother and Lepp's late wife, Linda Senti, died from thyroid cancer that began with polyps being discovered in the same area.


“I'm just scared to death, she's barely in her 30s,” said Lepp.


He has remarried since Senti's death. His new wife, Linda, will remain on the Upper Lake property, where no medical marijuana garden has been grown since 2004, said Lepp.


As to his ability to use medical marijuana in prison for his own health issues, Lepp said Patel told him in court that she doesn't know if he'll be able to have access to the drug.


He said it's hard to know what will happen in the next six weeks, noting there have been rumors of pardons being possible.


Hinckley said there seems to be a move in the country toward greater acceptance of medical marijuana, something he suggests Lepp may have helped facilitate.


“As of today, it's not happening soon enough to help him,” Hinckley said.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it .

Trackback(0)
Comments (20)Add Comment
Bye Bye
written by a guest, May 18, 2009
Too bad, but over the top gets you free room and board for the next 10 years. No good time work time in Federal Prison.
Stay small and be free.
Where's justice....
written by dogwalker, May 18, 2009
When a slumdog jurist ruins a mans life, and people like Rob Brown are given the benefit of the doubt?
Good Job Judge Patel !, Low-rated comment [Show]
..., Low-rated comment [Show]
LAKE COUNTY JUSTICE WHY?
written by CHARLIE, May 18, 2009
THE PRISONS ARE FULL HOW MANY TAX PAYER DOLLARS DID THIS TAKE AND HOW HUCH WILL IT COST TO IMPRISON HIM FOR TEN YEARS? HOW MUCH WILL THE APPEAL COST? SICK PEOPLE FEEL THEY NEED MARAJUANA WHY DEPRIVE THEM? WE NEED TO SEPERATE MARAJUANA FROM METH. HOW MUCH ARE WE WILLING TO SPEND TO REGULATE OTHER PEOPLES NEEDS?IT'S NO WONDER WE NEED A BIGGER COURT HOUSE AND A BIGGER STAFF FOR THE DA AND HIS GANG. THIS IS THE ONLY GROWTH INDUSTRY IN LAKE COUNTY
Got Greedy
written by jazz, May 18, 2009
It's one thing to grow 100 plants or so and have a valid reccomendation, its quite another to grow over 24,000. Eddie simply felt the MJ laws didn't apply to him. Welp, I guess it does.
Magnum and Sharinsky (sounds like a cheesy cop show, lol!)
written by StopHating, May 18, 2009
Guys like you need to stop hating others for no good reason. Sure, have your opinion about something, but why all the hate? I'll bet that if you didn't know the guy was growing marijuana, you and he would probably enjoy each others company. I think alcohol and tobacco suck, but I wouldn't stoop to your level and slather smokers and drinkers with hateful slander. What gives you the right?

Frankly, I think you're afraid of marijuana and you haven't got any reason to be. You're just using it to hate on others. Educate yourself on the subject and maybe add a bit of live-and-let-live attitude to your life and the world would be a better place.
excessive
written by purplegirl, May 19, 2009
The sentence IS excessive and a shame when there are so many other far more destructive crimes being given lesser sentences. I will never understand why people insist on such harsh penalties on what are essentially victimless crimes. I could understand if the man had harmed someone physically but it would seem he hasn't so it just makes no sense to give him a harsher sentence than say a domestic violence offender who gets only three years as a mandatory sentence.
Scary to me is...
written by cale_page, May 19, 2009
This guy had followers? Are these people going to start acting out? He got sentenced for breaking the law. Too much? maybe. Do we now get a backlash of dirty haired zombies sleeping in our parks. If you don't like the laws, change them. In order to do that you have to prove to people like me, who vote against you, that you will be responsible with this drug. This guy hurt your cause by his blatant disrespect for the majority. And if you think that this is an average fellow who would just blend with society, your not thinking clear. I have never seen him but I could probably pick him out of a lineup. Those of us who don't smoke it can spot those who do pretty easily. We don't hate you. Some of us even understand better then you think. Honesty and effort will bring about the law changes you are after. Two traits that Lepp failed to use.
Meth religion, Low-rated comment [Show]
...
written by Magnum, May 19, 2009
As A matter of fact I do know him, and I stand by what I said, He thouht he was above the law and he got caught. Purplegirl...to call it a victimless crime just goes to show how uneducated you are about the drug.
Cale...
written by StopHating, May 19, 2009
Your argument is weak and based on virtually the same unsubstantiated bias as Magnum and Sharinsky before you, as evidenced by your use of the "dirty haired zombies" stereotype. Sure, the guy's behavior was not smart, and it is obvious he doesn't represent the vast majority of users in this country. Most users do not grow thousands of plants, if any at all. Your comment about your prowess for picking him out of a lineup just shows your arrogance, which I suppose is based on your apparent lack of understanding and compassion on this issue. The fact is, you don't know what cannabis users look like. They look like anyone else, because they are anyone else. Well over 50% of the US population partakes in marijuana and with those odds, that means that possibly half of the people you know use it.

As far as working to change the laws, that's what we're doing, and big change is coming.
dear conformist cale,
written by a guest, May 19, 2009
Deaf, blind, dumb Cale, you are in the same tired, sinking, stinking boat with 'sheriff joe,' et al. Change has come and he's bringing 'change' with him! (You must be older than 50 i'm guessing.) Make sure you get that newfangled digital box upgrade for the ol' RCA pronto, because this revolution is televised. Your bigotry is soon the minority old timer. Abandon ship!

"52 percent of voters in a recent Zogby poll said they support legalizing, taxing and
regulating the growth and sale of marijuana."

"Free Eddy," and make him the CEO of such an enterprise. After all, he's apparently an admitted liar and lawbreaker. He'd fit right in with the other corporate American thugs. Have fun in your cubicle today Cale, so sorry about your 401K...
Zombies?
written by jjensen, May 19, 2009
Please don't send the zombies. Please do legalize this stuff so it can be taxed, dispensed at pharmacies, wipe out all the illicit grows and eliminate the criminal element.
Was ending prohibition this contentious?
In Response
written by purplegirl, May 20, 2009
I consider a victim of a crime to be someone adversely affected by a particular force outside of themselves... not by their own choice/free will. For example, I don't consider someone who dies from alcohol or drug abuse a victim... as they make the choice to partake in the drug. However, I do consider someone killed or injured by a drunk driver or a domestic partner a victim.

Keeping that in mind, please, Magnum, by all means, enlighten me.

While I am waiting for your response, here are a few statistics on domestic violence.

Here are the statistics relating to domestic violence (which, again, results in a mandatory sentence of only THREE years)...

The health related cost of domestic violence victims exceeds 5.8 billion dollars a year.

Of this 5.8 billion, 4.1 billion actually require immediate medical attention

According to a Department Of Justice report, 11% of all murders in the U.S. were committed by domestic/intimate partners.

Again, the mandatory sentence for domestic violence is 3 years, therefore, by all logic, the statistics you have for marijuana "victims" should be over 3 times the amount for domestic violence, considering that the mandatory sentence for marijuana possession/distribution is over three times as much as the mandatory sentence for domestic violence. So, by all means, let's see your statistics. I would be very interested in learning about these marijuana "victims". Maybe, I will learn something.
you bunch of hypocrates...
written by cale_page, May 20, 2009
I am just wrong because I don't think like you? Great argument. Obviously, you are easier to spot then you think. I am called a conformist for not conforming to your way of thinking. There are alot of people who, although they are not pot smokers, would vote for and support marijuana usage. If done responsibly, there are many positives to it. But when you spew lies and half truths about how great and safe it is, you turn me and those like me away. Be truthful. You don't really want it for medical usage. Thats the first thing to be truthful about. Out of the "over 50%" of our population that smoke it, its a small percentage that actually need it. Its safer and causes less problems than alcohol. Please, they are both drugs and have good and bad side affects. I've seen stoners offer out as bad a beating as a drunk. Dui includes being stoned so until you come up with actual numbers, you should leave that one alone.

I could go on with all the lies and mistruths I have heard but it gets redundant. You sound more and more like Big Tobacco when you dance around the real issues. I won't appologize for my attempt at humor above. Using a stereotype of pot smokers and the "rasta" way of life was just that, an attempt at humor. What I am sorry about is that for some reason the people in our great country can't come together and discuss these issues rationally and find the answers. We are always taking sides like its a competition. I am really not as arrogant as I suppose I come across. I would even like to see this drug legalized for recreational use. Not, however, until its done right. For me thats when it is not grown and sold within our communities and when people stop letting underage kids use it and take it to school. Honesty and responsibility is what I am looking for.
Hypocrates was no relation to Socrates
written by StopHating, May 20, 2009
Cale - I take it that "hypocrates" in your title was a joke, too. smilies/wink.gif I believe the word is "hypocrites" that you were after.

Semantics aside, it's nice to hear that you're supportive of legalization, regulation, and taxation. That's what needs to happen ASAP. This country has enough financial problems without all arms of the government sticking themselves into personal choice/social/health issues.

As far as the facts go, it's a tricky sea to navigate because on one side you have government reports that indicate what the government wants to see that supports their keeping drugs illegal. On the other hand you have pro-legalization people showing reports that are more realistic. Unfortunately, old timers will believe that the government can do no wrong, and so they believe what the government says.

As far as the argument for medical marijuana - I know for a fact that it helps relieve chronic back pain and is far, far less problematic than chemically manufactured drugs in terms of side effects and collateral damage to the user's body. The argument for medical marijuana is a legitimate one and while it can be helpful to changing the way pot is perceived by the public, the ultimate solution to the whole problem is legalization, regulation, and taxation.
always the case...
written by cale_page, May 20, 2009
If I hadn't waisted my youth with that crap, maybe I coulda went to college and learned how to spell. Oh and life hurts... get over it. You saying that, however, is my point. If people only used it as medicine, it would already be completely legal.
The New Moonshine
written by StopHating, May 21, 2009
If you don't yet know how pervasive Mexican organized crime is, take a look at the map of the cities they've been found to be operating in. And these are just the known cities. Odds are pretty good that you live in or near one of them. To think that the violent Mexican crime syndicates have their tendrils attached to so many parts of North America is scary as hell. And with the rate at which they're expanding their multi-billion-dollar infrastructure, they will be saturating this country within a few years.

Consider this: The country is in dire straights in terms of job loss, company closures, and homes being foreclosed. Good people are becoming desperate to survive and to keep their quality of life. Those people are running scared, afraid they'll lose their homes, their lives. What would they do if offered the chance to make thousands of extra dollars in cash, just for taking a pile of harmless weed from Point A to Point B? Some may even figure that even if they get caught, prison would be better than having nowhere to live.

Could legalization help those folks who are in need? Perhaps. It's hard to say. Maybe not immediately, but if drugs were legalized there would be a growing need for management of the new infrastructure. For example, regulation and taxation of drugs would need workers. Producers could open up facilities to grow cannabis and hemp for a multitude of uses - medical use, hemp seed oils for thousands of uses, hemp fiber for paper and clothing, and a plethora of other excellent uses, not to mention the recreational use industry. All new hemp/cannabis related industries would need retail outlets and general regulation management. This could theoretically provide tens of thousands, if not millions, of new jobs across the country and it would put the violent Mexican crime syndicates out of business. And it would free-up law enforcement to focus their attention on real crime instead of wasting billions on a never-ending and failing "battle". It would also move the billions of dollars of revenue gathered by the crime syndicates from them to the American people. Law-abiding citizens would earn those profits and the US government would reap the tax benefits. How on earth can that be any worse than the failed policy of the last 70 years? It wouldn't. Let's keep our money in our own hands, and out of the hands of the crime syndicates.

We are seeing an overwhelming majority of people online who support legalization and who understand the truth behind the "War on Drugs" and how that policy itself has harmed US citizens far more than the drugs themselves. Currently, the awareness of the truth about cannabis is becoming more well known, but there are still many people who do not know the facts, or they refuse to admit to the truth. What we need to do is be less afraid to talk about it and for people who are concerned about their cities and towns being taken-over by crime syndicates to stand up and voice their opinions to their local and national leaders. We need to end the negative stigma given to marijuana, cocaine, and meth by the media and we need to look at all drugs, including the drugs alcohol and tobacco, equally. We, and by "we" I mean the American People, need to let politicians know that hiding behind the failed "War on Drugs" is a cowardly and costly behavior and that if they don't stand up for what is right, we will vote them out of office and vote in people who have the courage and honesty to stand up and do the right thing for their town, their state, and their country.

There is a vile and insidious monster lurking just below the surface of our American culture and it's name is the Mexican crime syndicates. The only way to stop it is to legalize, tax, and regulate.
Forfeiture
written by muddiegirl, May 21, 2009
Maybe if the land is forfeited,it could be given to a volunteer community garden. There are more people in Lake County who need fresh vegetables more than marijuana.

Write comment
You must be logged in to post a comment. Please register if you do not have an account yet.

busy
Last Updated ( Tuesday, 19 May 2009 )
 
< Prev   Next >
TwinPine Casino & Hotel Wine Country's Favorite Playground
Powered By Page_Cache by Ircmaxell
Generated in 1.50181889534 Seconds