cannabisnews.com: Killing Highlights Risk of Selling Marijuana Killing Highlights Risk of Selling Marijuana Posted by CN Staff on March 01, 2007 at 21:44:39 PT By Kirk Johnson Source: New York Times Denver -- Ken Gorman, an aging missionary of marijuana, was found murdered in his home here two weeks ago. The unsolved crime is exposing the tangled threads at the borderland of the legal and illegal drug worlds he inhabited.Mr. Gorman, who was 60, legally provided marijuana to patients under Colorado’s medical marijuana law, but he also openly preached the virtues of illegal use, and even ran for governor in the 1990s on a pro-drug platform. In recent years, he had grown frightened as the mainstream medicine of cannabis care bumped against the unregulated and violent terrain of the illicit drug market. He had been robbed more than a dozen times in his home on Denver’s west side, had recently gotten a gun and also talked of installing a steel door and gates.“Ken was really fed up with the barrage of robberies and he told me it would never happen again,” said Timothy Tipton, a friend and fellow medical marijuana supplier, who said Mr. Gorman showed him the gun about two months ago.Some legal experts say Mr. Gorman’s death could lead to a reconsideration of how medical marijuana is administered here and elsewhere. Providers are often left exposed and vulnerable because of the nation’s conflicting drug laws, with marijuana use illegal under federal law but legalized for some medicinal purposes here and in 10 other states.Since 1997, after the first medical marijuana law was passed in California, as many as 20 legal marijuana providers have been killed around the country, mostly in robberies, said Allen St. Pierre, the executive director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, or Norml, a nonprofit advocacy group in Washington. Some in law enforcement, including Colorado’s attorney general, John W. Suthers, say the Gorman killing illuminates more clearly than ever that crime and marijuana cannot be disentangled.“Mr. Gorman showed that the law is abused and can be abused,” said Nate Strauch, a spokesman for Mr. Suthers. Many people in the medical marijuana supply system say the central risk comes down to the fact that they work in the shadows, where law enforcement officials are often either conflicted or hostile and crime is rampant. At the Colorado Compassion Club, for instance, which opened last year as a storefront support center in Denver, the 200 marijuana patients served there go through as much as a pound of marijuana a day. The club grows as much as it can, said its founder, Thomas E. Lawrence, but must rely on buys on the illicit market for the rest, usually made by one or two caregivers who have volunteered.Mr. Gorman’s killing, legal experts say, has exposed the paradoxes and ambiguities about medical marijuana that most states have failed to grapple with. The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, which administers the marijuana program, is not authorized, for example, to provide information about where the 1,100 patients who are certified under the program can obtain their drugs, according to the department’s Web site.The state also does not license marijuana providers, or inspect the quality of the drug that patients obtain. Colorado’s law allows patients with certain illnesses, as well their doctors and others who provide care, the right to possess, grow and transport marijuana. But all those things remain illegal under federal law. And a chief deputy district attorney for Denver, Greg Long, said that anyone selling drugs illegally, even if the final recipient was legally entitled to possess them, could still technically be violating state laws too — though as a practical matter, Mr. Long said, prosecutors do not generally pursue cases in which the drug being sold is marijuana for certified medical use.The portrait of Mr. Gorman is just as unclear. His friends say he was quixotic and selfless, a man uninterested in financial gain who tilted against the confining rules of society, especially the drug laws.A merry prankster at a time when marijuana advocacy groups were becoming more adept at politics than protest, he had become an anachronism, acquaintances say, whose counterculture antics embarrassed and angered many people in the medical-advocacy and legal reform movements.“I have gray hair on my head and I attribute some of it to Ken Gorman,” Mr. St. Pierre of Norml said.Some critics said Mr. Gorman was caught up in his own image as a rebel, thwarting even the rules about medical marijuana that could further the causes he espoused.Just one week before his death, for example, the local CBS television news affiliate in Denver broadcast an investigative story in which a young station employee with a hidden camera captured Mr. Gorman happily explaining how to fake the medical card that would make a drug transaction appear legitimate. The story prompted an uproar in medical marijuana circles, forcing Mr. Gorman to defend himself on a pro-marijuana Internet forum from attacks by people who said he had betrayed them by making medical marijuana look like a cover for old-fashioned drug-dealing.And he had become an angry, fearful man, his friends and acquaintances said. Though he had served time in prison — five years for a felony drug conviction in the mid-1990s — and often seemed to scoff at the law, he had grown increasingly frustrated about being a crime victim himself.The Denver police have revealed little about the murder investigation.A spokesman, Sonny Jackson, said the police responded to reports of shots fired at Mr. Gorman’s home around 7 p.m. on Feb. 17 and found Mr. Gorman with a gunshot wound to the chest. He died shortly thereafter. Mr. Jackson said that there had been an incident the previous night in Mr. Gorman’s home; someone had been arrested and neighbors reported shots fired. But investigators said they did not believe that incident and the slaying were connected.Colorado’s medical marijuana law, enshrined in the state’s Constitution by a statewide vote in 2000, protects people from prosecution under state law. Acquiring the drug illegally, however, puts those people in very dangerous company.Mr. Gorman, his friends say, had no intermediary. The face that was famous on television as Colorado’s most ebullient marijuana advocate was the same one making the buys out on the market.“It’s dangerous to help people,” said Mr. Tipton, who lives in a suburb of Denver and said he had about 45 marijuana patients. “We’re out there, exposed to abuse from patients, law enforcement, robberies — it’s a long list.”Lawyers and medical marijuana advocates in California — which has the oldest and by far largest medical marijuana system in the nation, with about 100,000 licensed drug recipients and 200 dispensaries — say that robberies and violence against medical distributors, a problem in the earlier days of the system, have become much less frequent because of improved security. But many robberies also often go unreported, said Dale Gieringer, the state coordinator for the California chapter of Norml. “It usually gets hushed up,” Mr. Gieringer said. Mr. Gorman’s home, still taped off by a police ribbon, has become a kind of shrine to the subculture he celebrated. On one night a few days after the killing, a group of more than 20 people — young men and teenagers, mostly — sat around a bonfire in Mr. Gorman’s front yard, passing marijuana joints and beer bottles as a Tupac Shakur song blared on a car stereo.“He was the most compassionate, kind man I knew,” said a young man who identified himself as Vuddah, as thick curls of smoke shrouded the group. “We want to keep this place open so that the patients can keep coming,” he added. “That’s what we’re going to do. “That’s what Ken would have wanted,” he continued. “To us, he was a medical marijuana freedom fighter.”Complete Title: Killing Highlights Risk of Selling Marijuana, Even LegallyDan Frosch contributed reporting.Source: New York Times (NY)Author: Kirk JohnsonPublished: March 2, 2007Copyright: 2007 The New York Times CompanyContact: letters nytimes.comWebsite: http://www.nytimes.com/NORMLhttp://www.norml.org/CannabisNews Medical Marijuana Archiveshttp://cannabisnews.com/news/list/medical.shtml Home Comment Email Register Recent Comments Help Comment #9 posted by FoM on March 04, 2007 at 15:13:34 PT mbc I think WAMM could be a wonderful example and help so many people in the future when the laws get changed in more states. [ Post Comment ] Comment #8 posted by mai_bong_city on March 04, 2007 at 14:42:55 PT yes indeed i thought it was an excellent film FoM, saw it at the big sky film festival probably a year ago now....dr. russo gave an intro and took questions after.... i agree, valerie and mike made the model. slowly but surely, others are taking up the cause as well. that would be my dream, to have a garden and community and be able to aid in restoring wellness all around..... someday. [ Post Comment ] Comment #7 posted by FoM on March 03, 2007 at 11:12:40 PT mbc I always thought that WAMM's Co-op was an excellent way of doing it. It's not just the garden Mike and Valerie have but the connection with the people. Care goes hand in hand with medicinal marijuana or it should in my opinion. We watched Waiting to Inhale again recently and it was so good. I hope everyone has seen this documentary.http://www.waitingtoinhale.org/ [ Post Comment ] Comment #6 posted by mai_bong_city on March 03, 2007 at 10:50:22 PT as to growing one's own... some people can't, for various reasons, such as: federal housing situation, illness, risk of losing all property, no space, or like, DEA employees as neighbors. everyone does the best they can, i think. the cost is prohibitive for medical users especially, and ones that can not tolerate other prescriptives, which would be covered under insurance. the ideal would be co-operatives. i hoped that the medical initiatives would have taken that into consideration, somehow had it addressed in the laws. it certainly would have averted much confusion on the issue, county by county, state by state.there are many methods of defending oneself, and of not being a contributor to the trouble. [ Post Comment ] Comment #5 posted by FoM on March 02, 2007 at 07:44:53 PT Just a Comment I agree with the comments. I am concerned about commenting on the cost since it seems to upset some people but the reality is cannabis will be so inexpensive when the laws are changed no one will be hurt because it won't be a money issue anymore. [ Post Comment ] Comment #4 posted by dongenero on March 02, 2007 at 07:17:17 PT violence Prohibition = violent, uncontrolled market.It's just that simple.You want to reduce the violence surrounding cannabis? Take the market out of the hands of criminals. Think, Al Capone.These AGs and police officials who describe cannabis and violence as intertwined really want to perpetuate the situation to keep the money flowing into their budgets....which means, sustain the violence for profit. [ Post Comment ] Comment #3 posted by doc james on March 02, 2007 at 06:59:02 PT The GCW knows what he/she is talking about. With medical cannabis fetching as much as gold on the market there's no wonder people are being robbed and killed for their medicine. Take the value out of it by re-legalizing it and voila, no more murders/robberies as anyone can plant a seed and grow medicine. With practice they may even become a master gardener like myself! And as someone stated, if you are not growing your own now, you are part of the problem by supporting the black market/corner drug dealers. [ Post Comment ] Comment #2 posted by potpal on March 02, 2007 at 05:37:49 PT Suthers, portrait of a prohibitionist Vote him out next time round. SAFER, I'm sure, is working hard to ensure just that.Yeah, this proves that crime and 'prohibition' cannot be disentangled.And a good reason everybody is growing their own. If we aren't, we're part of the problem. [ Post Comment ] Comment #1 posted by The GCW on March 01, 2007 at 23:24:33 PT I disagree with the Suthers way of thinking. I disagree with the following statements:"""Some in law enforcement, including Colorado’s attorney general, John W. Suthers, say the Gorman killing illuminates more clearly than ever that crime and marijuana cannot be disentangled.“Mr. Gorman showed that the law is abused and can be abused,” said Nate Strauch, a spokesman for Mr. Suthers."""TRUTH IS:If cannabis / the tree of life, were RE-legalized, it would not be priced like gold and there would be less violence, burgleries, homocides etc... Gradeschool kids would be able to understand that simple math, yet those who perpetuate cannabis persecution, prohibition and extermination live in darkness.Reasonable people including even school kids might also view cannabis prohibitionists as partly responsible for this (then) murder. [ Post Comment ] Post Comment