Los Angeles Times

He opened a medical pot dispensary in California. The feds spent 16 years prosecuting him

LOS ANGELES — For nearly 17 years, the federal government has been after Charles Lynch for running a medical marijuana dispensary. Prosecutors refused to drop their criminal case against him even as marijuana became fully legal in California and 23 other states. They refused to let it go when Congress forbade the Department of Justice from using its funds to criminally prosecute medical ...
Charles Lynch stands outside the U.S. Courthouse in Downtown Los Angeles, on July 25, 2008. Lynch is the owner of a medical marijuana dispensary in Morro Bay, Ca. Though the business is legal under state law, Lynch was arrested in July of last year for violating federal drug laws. This was the opening day of his trial.

LOS ANGELES — For nearly 17 years, the federal government has been after Charles Lynch for running a medical marijuana dispensary.

Prosecutors refused to drop their criminal case against him even as marijuana became fully legal in California and 23 other states. They refused to let it go when Congress forbade the Department of Justice from using its funds to criminally prosecute medical marijuana activities that were consistent with state law.

Prosecutors have pursued Lynch's case — which involves conflicting state and federal marijuana laws — through appeals and delays and criticisms that they were spending too many resources on a case that meant so little.

"Twenty-five percent of my life," Lynch, now 61, said in a Southern drawl at a hearing in downtown Los Angeles this month.

When federal authorities launched their probe in 2007, George W. Bush was in the White House and Lynch was a respected businessman in Morro Bay with a three-bedroom ranch-style house in nearby Arroyo Grande.

These days, he struggles financially, lives in a single-wide trailer on his mom's property in New Mexico and strains to remember the details of the marijuana operation that got him in so much trouble.

"I've lost track," he testified at the hearing, as his mother looked on.

Lynch and his lawyers have portrayed the case as a pointless exercise by the Department of Justice that has

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