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"They made thousands of dollars every day," Lam said. "Their motive was not the <br />betterment of society. Their motive was profit." One federal indictment accuses John <br />Sullivan, 38, of growing more than. 100 marijuana plants for distribution. and distributing <br />marijuana or processed marijuana-based goods from his two dispensaries, the Purple Bud <br />Room in Pacific Beach and THC in San Diego. Five managers of the Co-op San Diego <br />were indicted separately on similar allegations. Wayne Hudson, 42; Christopher Larkin, <br />34; and Ross McManus, 39, are alleged to have distributed marijuana products through <br />the co-op. Scott ~~~right, 40, and A~Iichael Ragin, 34, are accused of growing hundreds of <br />plants for the co-op at their homes. Messages left at the dispensaries were not <br />immediately returned. Also, the San Diego County District Attorney has filed state <br />charges against one of the men named in the federal indictment and nine others for <br />selling marijuana and possessing marijuana for sale. State charges were filed against <br />Sullivan's THC dispensary and four other independent operations in San Diego. <br />Prosecutors alleged that these dispensaries sold. marijuana or marijuana-based products <br />with little concern for legitimate medical need. "The party is over," District Attorney <br />Bonnie Dumanis said at a news conference with federal prosecutors. She added. that <br />Proposition 2i5, the ballot measure that legalized marijuana for medical purposes, has <br />been "severely abused by neighborhood pot dealers opening up storefronts." Complaints <br />from residents living near dispensaries precipitated an investigation beginning in <br />September 2005 by the Sa11 Diego police, the county sheriffs department, the Drug <br />Enforcement Administration, Dumanis said. Dumanis said that her office has "no <br />intention" of preventing people who suffer chronic illnesses like AIDS, glaucoma or <br />cancer from using medically prescribed marijuana. to ease their pain. But San Diego <br />County has fought an ongoing battle to limit the impact of the medical marijuana law, <br />which was approved in 1.996 by 55 percent of voters. San Diego has ignored a state <br />requirement drat counties issue identification cards to registered medical marijuana users <br />and maintain a registry of people who apply for the cards. In December, county <br />supervisors sued the state of California and its director of health services in federal court, <br />saying federal law that prohibits marijuana use trumps the state law. The county moved. <br />that lawsuit to state court in February to avoid bringing the case to the 9th tJ.S. Circuit <br />Court of Appeals, which has sided in recent rulings with medical marijuana supporters, <br />That suit is still pending. The men indicted by the federal grand jury face a maximum of <br />40 years in prison and $2 million u~ fines for each of the allegations listed in the <br />indictment, authorities said.. The San Diego County District Attorney's office released a <br />complaint sent last week to the state medical. board against four physicians alleging that <br />they wrote "recommendations" for medical marijuana use -doctor's notes required by <br />state law - to apparently healthy individuals. <br />(Source: <br />Http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/breaking news/ 149823 95.htm) <br />City hopes to close legal pot dispensary <br />July 8, 2006 By Linda Lou UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER SAN MARCOS - An <br />existing medical-marijuana dispensary here survived a City Council vote in February that <br />banned any more dispensaries from opening. <br />20 <br />75A-29 <br />