Neighbors file federal lawsuit to shut down Sonoma County cannabis grower
A group of Petaluma neighbors is suing a nearby cannabis grower in what may be the first case in California using a federal racketeering and corruption law to seek to bar cultivation of marijuana since it was legalized for recreational use.
Four families living on Herrerias Way east of Petaluma filed the suit this week in U.S. District Court in San Francisco. They claim the growers, including Carlos Zambrano and his partners in Green Earth Coffee, are raising cannabis without local permits or state licenses and have prevented residents from enjoying their homes because of noxious odors and noise.
Stefan Bokaie, who with his wife, Carol Bokaie, are plaintiffs in the case, said the group took legal action because they are frustrated that Sonoma County’s code enforcement process has so far failed to stop cultivation from occurring in about 40 greenhouses erected this spring on the 15-acre property on Adobe Road near his home.
“If there’s an illegal cannabis grow, it should be shut down; it’s?very simple,” said Bokaie, who has lived on Herrerias Way for about three years.
Civil RICO case
The neighbors are using a little-known civil statute of the federal Racketeer-?Influenced and Corrupt Organization Act, or RICO - passed in the 1970s to prosecute criminal organizations - to sue Zambrano and Green Earth, following a tactic used in Colorado, Oregon and Massachusetts by businesses and residents trying to rid their neighborhoods of cannabis activity in states that have legalized pot.
Zambrano was out of the country and unavailable for an interview this week, according to his attorney, Joe Rogoway.
Rogoway said Zambrano and his partners have been trying to conform their operations to local and state law and believed they were following guidelines provided to them by county officials for moving an existing cannabis-growing operation from a different Petaluma area property to the Adobe Road site.
“That cultivation was occurring only because the county told them they could do it there,” Rogoway said. “It’s fundamentally unfair.”
Public records show Sonoma County has taken steps to halt cannabis production at the Adobe Road site since late May, when a code enforcement officer inspected the property. Zambrano is appealing the county’s May 29 notice ordering the company to cease all cannabis activities on the land. A hearing on the issue is scheduled for this morning.
“The county’s position is it is an illegal operation,” said Tim Ricard, the county’s cannabis program manager.
The other plaintiffs in the lawsuit are Surinder and Marie Uppal and their son, Gurjiwan Uppal; Brenda and Patrick Ward; and Neera and Sandeep Bhandari. All are residents of Herrerias Way, a short dead-end road on Petaluma’s eastern outskirts surrounded by vineyards. They are seeking unspecified punitive damages and an injunction to halt any cannabis production taking place.
In addition to Green Earth, the lawsuit also names the property owner, a company called Flying Rooster, as well as Exchange Bank, which recorded a deed of trust for the property in 2015.
Gary Hartwick, president and CEO of Exchange Bank, said the bank no longer has any ties to the property, after a severance process begun several months ago when he learned there was marijuana cultivation occurring on the site. Hartwick said the claims against his bank have no merit.
“The unfortunate thing is a group of residents - who instead of searching for the actual information - are making very false statements with respect to Exchange Bank,” Hartwick said. “They have never asked us the question, ‘Do you finance growing operations?’ We do not.”
Zambrano and Green Earth began cultivating cannabis on the Adobe Road property sometime around April in about 40 hoop houses set up in the center of a vineyard, according to the lawsuit.
The neighbors claim in their lawsuit that the strong skunky smell of cannabis cloaked the neighborhood starting around that time. The stench created or exacerbated health problems, worsening Brenda Ward’s asthma and making Carol Bokaie nauseous, among other reactions, according to the suit. The neighbors claim they must keep their windows closed and homes sealed up to avoid the stench, and they and their children have stopped spending time outside.
Most significantly, the Uppals claim the stench of cannabis has caused significant breathing problems for their son, Gurjiwan, who is a paraplegic and relies on a breathing tube.
“Family members must remain near Gurjiwan at all times to guard against the risk of suffocation,” according to the complaint.
Their Napa-based attorney, Kevin Block, said they are not against marijuana’s legalization but they do wish to be protected from the impacts of illegal cultivation. Block said Sonoma County has failed to do that.
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