Pot times July 20, 2005
The 'Professional Bust' Of Fred Demchuk
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v05/n1145/a09.htmlNewshawk: Jay Bergstrom
Pubdate: Wed, 20 Jul 2005 THE "PROFESSIONAL BUST" OF FRED DEMCHUK
Source: Anderson Valley Advertiser (CA)
Column: Cannabinotes
Copyright: 2005 Anderson Valley Advertiser
Contact:
editor@theava.com
Website: http://www.theava.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2667
Author: Fred Gardner
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115
(Cannabis - California)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm
(Cannabis - Medicinal)
It was one of those stories that makes a big splash in the local media and then
disappears. A warehouse in Hunters Point had been raided by the DEA in
late March, "a sophisticated marijuana cultivation site" dismantled,
more than 400 plants seized.
There was no follow-up story because nobody ever got charged.
The man who had leased the warehouse and was indeed growing marijuana there
-Fred Demchuk-showed me around the denuded interior about a week after the bust
and described what had gone down. Reporting the story could only go
against his interests, I figured, so I didn't.
I'd first met Fred in '96 at Prop 215 campaign headquarters ( Dennis Peron's
fabulous club on Market Street ). Fred was from Detroit, originally; a
semi-retired engineer with a blue-collar air. We both used to come by
around 5 p.m. on Fridays to hear Mike Mack play the piano and enjoy the
end-of-the-work-week vibes.
In recent years Fred and Mike were involved in a patients' union whose members
are mostly low-income folks. The founders had given thought to launching a
dispensary but lacked the necessary capital.
Their Plan B was to rely on competent Fred Demchuk and other volunteers to grow
or otherwise obtain cannabis for union members at the lowest possible price.
Fred leased the small warehouse in April 2001. He cleaned and painted,
then hired an experienced indoor grower to install lights, ballasts, an
irrigation system, etc., and to oversee production. Fred handled security
himself by moving into a small trailer outside the warehouse.
On week-ends he'd visit his wife and family in San Jose.
In due course Fred and the grower had a falling out. Allegations of theft
were made, but not to the police.
The grower departed and Fred took over the operation.
He had never grown indoors ( and only once outdoors, in 1976, on a very small
scale ) but he'd been looking over the grower's shoulder and learned about pH
and what goes into the nutrient solution. "He was doing things
wrong," Fred said in retrospect. "I took over in the midst of a
dying crop and somehow turned it around.
We've been able to sell everything that we grow. Everything.
Everything we grew was sticky. Even the cops, when they were taking the
stuff out, said man this stuff is really sticky." You know how growers
talk... "They were beautiful.
It broke my heart to see 'em go... Some were ready to harvest, some were
three weeks into bloom.. We used two lights per table.
That was our secret of success: photosynthesis you couldn't believe!
This whole room was up to here, almost ready to be harvested..."
The confiscated crop was the one the union was counting on to repay their loans
and come out ahead for once. "We've never been able to make a profit
at this place," according Fred. "It costs $3500 a month to rent
and another $2000 at least for the electricity." Fred expected to get one
ounce per plant -a pound to a pound and a half per table.
There were 12 tables. He was growing on a 90-day cycle -a month of
vegetative growth followed by two months of blooming. "We'd run out
of money at the end of the cycle," said Fred. "It might be a
month before we could afford to buy clones again."
The buds were dried and sold to union members for $200/ounce at twice-monthly
meetings called "jubilees." Fred described the members as
"basically people who can't afford $400 at a club. I can honestly say
we provided it at cost because we didn't make a friggin' dime. If I had I
wouldn't be living in a trailer and I wouldn't have 240,000 miles on the car I'm
driving.
This is a break-even operation."
The raiders had taken lights and ballasts ( 34 each at $300/pair = $90,000 worth
of equipment, according to Fred, although the union's actual outlay had been
much lower because some of the gear had been donated ). Left behind were
the 12 tables, each containing 25 one-gallon pots with cleanly lopped-off stumps
about four inches high. Each plant had received water and nutrients via
thin black tubing from sprinkler heads coming off a 2-inch riser from a 1-inch
PVC pipe that connected to a bigger plastic skeleton. The growing medium
in the pots was rock wool. Netting strung above the table had supported
buds that, at the time of the raid, had been forming for three weeks.
"Some people use a spring attached to a device up here to hold the branch
up," said Fred. "Trellis works just as well... We had a
system where you could irrigate all the plants from one pump. They didn't
take the pumps."
Busted along with Fred was a 31-year old Navy vet disabled by severe migraines.
Fred estimated the raiding party at "twenty or more -state, county, there
must have been four or five agencies-led by four DEA agents. They came in
with guns drawn, but they didn't put them to our heads or throw us to the floor.
They handcuffed us but they didn't curse at us. They were professionals.
In fact, I give them an outstanding. I've done enough of these operations
myself in the military to know that when you go through the door you've got to
have absolute fire control because somebody could pull off a stray round and hit
a friendly or hit a civilian.
Two: you've got to have flawless intelligence going in. And number three,
execution has to be flawless as well. When you come in and take somebody
down you don't have to shout at them, you don't have to push them to the ground.
A gun in the face is plenty, believe me. They didn't even do that, they
were professional enough to lower them."
Fred said the turning point came quickly. "They asked me if I had a
weapon on the site and I said, 'Oh yes, I do, I have my navy officer's dress
sword.'" From the time they saw the sword, Fred said, "the officers
treated us even less unfriendly." The sword had been awarded to him at
Annapolis for excellence in engineering. He got it out, inspected the
blade, twirled it snappily, and sheathed it.
Fred entered the Navy in 1956 as an enlisted man, then aspired to become an
officer. Rep. John Conyers backed him and in 1957 he entered the
Naval Academy. Because he read, spoke, and wrote Russian ( as the son of
Ukranian immigrants ) and already had experience in submarines, Fred "got
asked to participate in some special activities," and didn't graduate with
the class of '61. He retired in 1972. "All my friends and all
my operations have been with submarines and SEALs," he says.
"Matter of fact, one of my best friends, George Worthington, is head of
worldwide operations for the SEALs."
Fred said he'd recently called Worthington seeking "help for one of our
brethren who'd got in trouble with his CO -a SEAL. But George didn't want
me to get involved with it and I said 'okay.'" Fred said he knew several
other admirals and politically powerful men from his Navy days. "John
McCain and Jack Poindexter were in the class of '58, and I got to know them by
accident.
Stepping on their shoes.
I had to polish McCain's shoes for three weeks and Poindexter's for a month.
Never thought I would ever hear from those two guys again, to be honest with
you. I've got Poindexter's signature somewhere -they put me on report and
it's his signature on the report."
Fred resumed his favorable review of his own bust. "In a military
take down I don't even ask for them to open the door. I just give the
order 'Open fire' and we just hit this place with guns that can shoot 6,000
rounds a minute.
Fuel-air grenades that when they go off they kill everybody in the building.
And then we follow that up with some stun grenades and thermite grenades and
make it really hot inside in case someone did survive.
And then we come in.
"A paramilitary takedown is one step down, without all that ordnance but
still pushing people down when they catch 'em and putting guns to their head.
A paramilitary bust leaves you with the feeling that you've just been assaulted
by storm troopers and everyone's pissed off, including the media.
"When it's a professional bust, the only thing you get pissed off about is
that they took your weed. I'm pissed off that we don't have any medicine
to provide to over 100 people.
I'm not pissed off at the DEA officers. In fact, it's a pleasure to watch
professionals in action.
They had some kind of cutters, several boxes of tools in plastic carryalls, and
investigation kits, fingerprinting kits. They fingerprinted the place and
maybe even left audio devices and video devices behind." Fred said the DEA
agents "got chairs for us to sit down in. They loosened my handcuffs
when they realized I had arthritis -and it was terrible because I couldn't
medicate. They let us go to the bathroom.
They didn't browbeat us or attempt to shout at us and make disparaging remarks.
One of them asked me if I'd done any intelligence work and I told him yes, I'd
worked with Admiral Worthington and so forth.
He asked me my rank and I told him that was classified. He said he'd never
heard of a classified rank and I said that under the new anti-terrorist rules
you're not allowed to reveal it.
"They attempted to find out how much business we were doing here.
They came in with the impression that this was a big moneymaking operation.
They didn't realize the problems we had with crops.
They didn't realize that growing in rock wool is very demanding, you make one
mistake and you lose a crop... The cost of hydroponic nutrients is quite
high. The really good ones are from Canada, and because of the trade
imbalance, the cost is going up... We had a problem with mites that almost
destroyed an entire crop. I mean, at first we just stood there and watched
the little bastards at work. But we got smart about it. Between each
crop we had sufficient time here to bomb the room but not the crop with
insecticide bomb, a special cytotoxin that kills them. You don't see them
for months.
You don't want to use it when the plants are in bloom...
"We've had problems and overcome them. We've learned so much, this
crop would have been the pinnacle of our expertise.
We were finally at the point where we're producing a reasonable crop. I
pointed out to these officers that really what they were taking away was
medicine for Iraqi war veterans, Vietnam War veterans, and disabled people.
I said, 'you know, you don't realize what harm you're doing.'
"The agent in charge we'll call Hughes. He pointed out that while we
legitimate patients might constitute three percent, the total market out there
was 97 percent people who were abusing it. I said, 'Well go after the 97
percent.' Fred laughed at his own opportunism, said he didn't tell Hughes that
the numbers seemed like the reverse of reality -97 percent of cannabis users
have valid medical reasons. "Hughes said there was nothing under
federal law that legitimized medicinal marijuana and he advised people to use
Marinol. I laughed and Eric [the other man being detained] gave him the
scientific reasons." The DEA agents seemed "vastly uninformed with
respect to medicinal cannabis," said Fred.
There are 11 Vietnam and Persian Gulf vets in Fred's union.
He had been trying to organize a support group for Iraq war vets who needed more
help than the VA could provide, and said he'd been in touch with eight men who
were interested. "Veterans have been through the gamut of having been
subjected to almost every medication out there.
Cannabis does the job so much more efficiently with less problems, societal
effects, nausea, vomiting and so forth.
But I do not think the DEA agents are cognizant of that." Fred said the
agent's line about three percent of patients being legitimate seemed like
disinformation he'd picked up at a training.
"At some point they realized that we only had two thousand dollars in cash
and it was for our PG&E bill so they gave it back. I believe Agent
Hughes surmised that this actually was a legitimate medical grow. If this
guy was wearing an Italian suit he could be on the cover of Gentleman's
Quarterly, he was that good looking.
I realized he had his thing to do, to uphold the laws he's been sworn to uphold.
And I had my thing to do, I got my veterans to take care of, my disabled people
to take care of. Where can we find some middle ground?
He said he wanted names of meth labs. I said, 'If I knew of a meth lab, it
would be on your desk in a heartbeat.' He said, 'Good for you.' So he knows
right off the bat that we have no use for meth labs, we have no use for pill
pushers of the type that profiteer, and we have no use for the street-drug
people that have profaned the name of medicinal cannabis.
"He asked me if I'd help them penetrate the Compassionate Caregivers club.
They wanted to know where the money was going.
I said basically all I know about it is there's some people who are pissed off
at them occasionally, but I hadn't had any problems with them. They wanted
to know who was pissed off enough to give them more information. I
couldn't come up with anybody."
Fred acknowledged having sold part of his crop to a dispensary when the union
had fewer members. "When we did sell at one time to the clubs, our
stuff was always 5-star. Part of our secret was hormones and catalytic
boosters to increase the uptake of nutrients.
The plant will continue to produce resins and oils continuously, all you've got
to do is feed it. In rock wool you can get away with that. In soil
you reach a saturation point but in rock wool it's continuous drainage.
So you can continue to feed that plant and it will grow and achieve medicinal
grade.
"The DEA said they were going to assay what they took from us for THC.
So I'm gonna find out. They got some that's three weeks into bloom and
some that was fully.
I'm sure it was up to 12%. I'm going to ask them to give me that figure.
Of course, if they give me an indictment they will, it'll be in there...
"Hughes said he doesn't want to see any kids using cannabis.
He has a baby and he doesn't want his baby to grow up to use drugs.
I said, 'Look Hughes, you and I are in that ballpark.
I don't believe that cannabis should be legalized.
I think that medical cannabis should be legalized and administered so that kids
don't get it. I don't think a kid can perform at 100% efficiency after
he's been out smoking dope or using alcohol.
It's just a physical impossibility. I want to keep it out of the hands of
children because it's a medicine. It is not a recreational drug...
You have to get to the point in life where you can understand what its use is
and how it affects you. Without that basic perception and understanding -
-what we call the age of accountability in the Mormon church-you should not be
using cannabis."
A Ukranian mormon?
"In the old country some of my family were Jews who changed over to
Catholicism and Ukrainian Baptist. I grew up on both sides.
When I decided to sober up -to clean up my act with alcohol- a friend of mine
talked to me about the Mormon church.
I realized that my family had been stunted because of my alcoholism. There
had to be something out there that would give us an anchor and some hope and
allow us to restart in another direction. And I was glad there was because
right off the bat there was a class at the church about benching children
-time-outs-instead of beating them. I had been raised in a family where
you beat children... Instead of Sunday school they had a course taught by
this psychologist. It paid off because as soon as we started doing that
instead of spanking them -'You sit down until you're ready to talk to me about
why you're misbehaving,' and they couldn't leave that chair, they couldn't play,
they couldn't watch TV- the results were amazing.
"When I married my wife she had three children and then we had three more
children. And they all hated me. I was an alcoholic who used the
military tactics that I'd been taught all my life to raise a family.
It doesn't work, that 'my way or the highway' type of thing.
With no middle ground, children rebel.
I was able to salvage good relations with three out of six. Thank God
we're all today on speaking terms.
"Once I started sobering up and they saw a different side of me they began
to realize there was some hope for the old bastard.
I had my last drink in 1979 and I've been sober ever since.
I'm still active in AA today.
I have a lot of people I sponsor." Fred said he wished there were more
cannabis-friendly meetings. "AA tries to separate the two. I
told my sponsors that there was only one way I could have gotten sober without
killing somebody.
Coming back from the military situations that I was in there was a lot of
built-up anger and wrath inside of me and I took it out on my family. I
finally was able to get one year of sobriety and then two. It took me
three years after I joined the Mormon church.
But nobody ever came up to me and said quit drinking or quit that damn cigarette
smoking. It took me a long time to get rid of those addictions.
"I started using cannabis in 1976 when I quit drinking.
By the grace of God, I was a block away from a place called Bob's Rent-a-Garden
in San Jose. He was a cannabis user himself and in the back of his
rent-a-garden I grew cannabis for myself and we smoked three or four joints a
day and I was able to come down from alcohol without killing anybody or harming
my family or harming myself.
It was just like landing with what they call a 100-foot canopy parachute.
You land so soft you don't even know you landed. And I was able at that
time also to go to AA meetings.
Cannabis is what kept me from going back to alcohol.
No question about.
I was able to level out. And I was going to church as well. I really
wanted to change my life. I realized that I was in a spiral.
I just wanted to change my life. You come to a point where you realize
that something's got to change and it's got to be you. Nobody's going to
change around you to make room for you. My wife gave me an ultimatum:
straighten out or fly out, so I had no choice.
"Once I straightened out I was able to get jobs and get back on my feet and
resurrect my life. My last civilian job was as a stockbroker with Morgan
Stanley. I was trained in the South Tower of the World Trade Center.
I was supposed to go back and work on the 44th floor of the South Tower. I
have strong feelings about it because I knew people who were in the tower at the
time. My son-in-law had just received a job offer to work in the North
Tower. He was supposed to come in that day but the lady who hired him said
'Don't bother' because she wouldn't be in till Wednesday.
"That weekend was our Naval Academy 40th anniversary celebration. I
was supposed to go. A friend of mine had booked a block of seats and there
was an extra seat coming back, so I bought a one-way ticket on Jet Blue to go
there and then I'd have a free seat on the way back. At the last minute
something came up and I canceled.
I would have been coming back on the plane that crashed into the Pentagon.
That was the third time in my life that I'd cheated death that way..."
What happens next?
The DEA gave Fred reason to hope that no indictment will come down.
"One of the things they told me was, 'You want to save yourself some money,
don't bother getting an attorney because this is going to go away.' I don't
think they want to arrest a guy with an honorable discharge who's going to bring
in some admirals as character witnesses. I told them, I fought for this
country and I bled for this country. I spent 93 days in Bethesda Navy
Hospital. They put me back together so they could send me back into
submarines. That's how desperate they were for people.
They may have had manpower but not enough skilled manpower, and there's a
difference...
"I said I'd be willing to help them with anybody who's a crook in this
business but I'm not going to turn in a fellow veteran.
There are some thieves in this business and they'll get taken down sooner or
later.
But most of the people in the medical cannabis movement are pretty much straight
arrows and honest.
There's a few crooks.
I know 'em, I've met 'em, I've been on the losing end a few times.
But they're few and far between and that's why it's a good movement to be in as
far as I'm concerned. To be able to be of service to other people.
That's where I've derived most of my satisfaction over the last few years.
Seeing people all of a sudden be happy.
Seeing people who when they walked in the door were pissed off, angry about the
world, sit down and socialize with you and their attitude changes completely.
I also see it with the people coming back from Iraq. I didn't get into
this too much with Agent Hughes because I didn't want to give him names but
there's a lot of people who come back from the Iraqi war who are really bitter.
Some of these people will never get the psychiatric help that they really need.
The rules are that you get 90 days of psychiatric help and if you qualify for
longer you have to show reason.
The point is, without some sort of support group other than the VA system these
people are gonna be handled the same way we handled the Vietnam veterans and
we're going to have another horde of homeless people out on the streets."
Veterans hook up with Fred through mutual friends, word of mouth, the AA
grapevine. "They go to the VA and they run into someone who knows me.
Or they run into Paul at the Divisadero club, he's a Vietnam veteran. Word
of mouth is how I like it. The veterans have been prescribed drugs like
morphine sulfate, Vicodin. Our first grower was a perfect example.
He was misdiagnosed by the VA. They fed him a whole bunch of drugs that
damn near destroyed his pancreas. Then they discovered that he really had
pancreatitis all along! They told him well, you've got so many years to live,
and they gave him a bunch of new drugs.
With pancreatitis one of the symptoms is severe back pain. He treated that
with Vicodin, when that ran out he tried to get Oxycontin on the street.
Cannabis wasn't strong enough for him. As a consequence he became more and
more strung out on these other drugs and it affected his personality. One
day after we'd raised some financial questions he just walked out, left us with
a dying crop. I was thumbing through the book real quick.
The thing to do with mites is just get rid of the plant entirely and hope that
it's only on that one plant. To get rid of them entirely, if you could
afford it, you put in huge air conditioners and grow your plants at about 60
degrees. At the same time you heat the nutrient solution.
That way you have what they call 'the feet is warm and the shoulders is cold.'
The mites can't take the cold. They head for Florida, man. So that
was our plan. The feds were half-right when they called this 'a
sophisticated operation.' But we had nowhere near the money for a really
sophisticated operation.
If we had, we could have brought the price down to about 100 bucks.
And made enough to get by on."
The raid lasted about five hours, till 4 p.m. "The TV cameramen came,
the sheriff's deputies, a woman from the DA's office, just like checking it out.
'What should we do today?' 'Let's go to the bust...' The only agent I had any
trouble with," Fred said, "was one who kept trying to put words in my
mouth.
Like he says, 'How long you been selling marijuana to the clubs?' I says, 'The
reason we're here is because we don't want to deal with the clubs.
We want to deal with the patients directly.
The clubs would only pay us a certain amount of dollars and the patients will
pay us an equivalent amount.
But the clubs will mark that up and the patients will have to pay it."
Fred said he had notified the landlord ( who had undergone chemotherapy and was
not entirely lacking in empathy ). "We need a month to get out.
I'm going to get a team of people in here and move stuff out and then we're
going to have a going away party... We had just upgraded the electricity,
that's what pisses me off. We'd been blowing fuses all the time. One
of our friends is a master electrician and a good one. Now it's upgraded
and we gotta leave"
When he drove home to San Jose after the bust, Fred said, "My wife told me,
'I'm glad you're out of the business.' My sister said the same thing. The
tension had been so dramatic... My wife is a live-in babysitter for my two
grandsons, two wonderful boys. They just love grandma and we love them.
I get down to see grandma on the weekends and my son-in-law and my daughter take
off for Crescent City. Last night the youngest got up at 9 o'clock and
headed for grandma's bedroom just as I was heading for grandma's bedroom.
Well, guess who got to sleep with grandma last night?" This boy is just
beautiful.
He has the Russian features, steel blue gray eyes... And so, these kids
and my wife made me think: 'What am I doing? Where are my priorities?'
"It could be that this is a blessing in disguise.
Not that I'm going to stop doing what I was doing, but it can be done on a
smaller scale.
Within reason. Like Agent Hughes said, 'This guy Larry's on my radar
screen.' I said 'How did I get on your radar screen?' He didn't answer that
question. I said 'I'm gonna stay off your radar screen.' I asked him, 'if
I had grown less than a hundred plants would you be here?' He went like this
[makes a dismissive non-verbal gesture with hand]. He didn't come out and
say 'No, absolutely not,' but...
Fred estimates the cost of prosecuting him would be well over a quarter of a
million dollars. "For what?" he asks rhetorically.
"'This guy's got zero assets, we're not gonna take his trailer.
His navy dress sword?' Come on. The DEA is going to have to start
diverting their resources to some important stuff.
If they don't they're gonna catch hell from the citizens who are gonna wake up
and say 'Wait a minute, you busted these legitimate cannabis guys and these guys
are walking around free making meth in my neighborhood?'
"Keeping medical cannabis illegal costs too damn much. Society may
not be that rational, but that's our job, to explain that when you really boil
it down, does it make any sense to prosecute anybody who's growing for
legitimate patients?
We could have music programs back in our schools!" Fred related his
thoughts about the bust in early April. On June 18, according to Mike
Mack, Fred was rear-ended by a big-rig in San Jose and died in the hospital the
next day.
