Mother Vows To Fight Abuse, Drug Charges

Smokin Moose

Fallen Cannabis Warrior & Ex Moderator
If Suzette Evans lived in North Carolina, where marijuana possession is decriminalized, it's unlikely she'd have gotten more than a $50 citation when police found a pipe in her home.

In Grainger County, however, like most of Tennessee, possession of a marijuana pipe can cost nearly $1,000 - and your children.

Evans' 15-year-old son was taken away from her the night of Aug. 10, to remain in protective custody for 34 days. They are reunited now, after a special meeting with the Department of Children's Services, but a hearing set for Nov. 16 will determine whether Evans' medicinal use of marijuana constitutes child abuse, neglect or endangerment.

"I have narrow-angle glaucoma," Evans said. It is a rare condition even among those with glaucoma.

Though Evans admits she recreationally used marijuana when she was younger, she says she resumed smoking small amounts to help her eyes.

"I come from an old hippie family," Evans said. "Do I agree with the abuse? No."

Allen St. Pierre, executive director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, said uncontested medical research dating far back has shown that marijuana smoking reduces intraocular pressure with the first inhale to combat glaucoma, one of a number of illnesses marijuana is used to treat.

St. Pierre said a man in 1976 successfully sued the government to get medical marijuana.

"The disparity of how marijuana is treated in our society is terrific," St. Pierre said. "Twelve ( states ) have actually decriminalized the possession of marijuana," usually less than 1 ounce. Marijuana can be legally medically used in 12 states as well.

"Tennessee is a state which has no accommodations for people who use cannabis for medical purposes or nonmedical purposes," St. Pierre said. "The Southeast Untied States really yields no quarter to marijuana smokers."

He said in California, for example, people can medically smoke marijuana on the street in accordance with state law.

"It's night and day between what's happening in eastern Tennessee and the entire Western United States," he said. "This woman is a victim of geography."

Evans has produced medical records showing she is being treated for narrow-angle glaucoma. The records show a decrease to an all-time low intraocular pressure during the time she says she was using cannabis, and an increase after she quit using it.

She quit when Rutledge police officer Adam Morgan found her pipe July 24 during a search Evans consented to. No marijuana was found.

Evans said her son did not know she used marijuana until her pipe was found, and he had not been exposed to it.

She had a court date set for the charge, and thought that was the end of the matter.

On Aug. 10, Evans and her son, Jesse Johnson, got into an argument and Evans called the police, as she had done before.

"My son has a history of mental, emotional and behavioral problems. He has been in treatment since the age of 7," Evans said. She said they've had arguments before and she's called the police.

"They've always been courteous, professional aE& ( they've ) handled us with great respect," Evans said of the Rutledge Police Department.

Officer Richard McGinnis responded to her call on Aug. 10 and took her son into protective custody. Evans and her son allege that he began asking Jesse questions only about Evans' use of marijuana.

"All of it" was because of the standing marijuana charge, Evans said. "That officer knew that I had not been sentenced yet."

The charge against her now is child abuse and child neglect or endangerment, for admitting to smoking marijuana in her home, which the warrant says "exposed her 15-year-old son to illegal drugs."

"If the mother is using marijuana in front of the child, does the child have accessibility to the illegal drug, too?" McGinnis said.

McGinnis said at the time he took Johnson into protective custody, he had no knowledge of the marijuana charge, that he made the decision because of the nature of the domestic dispute. He said there were other factors in the case which he could not yet comment on. He also made the decision because the police chief had been out to the house the previous night.

"I thought there needed to be a separation between the two individuals," he said. "( Evans ) was irrational, would not speak with me."

DCS took action from there, and the formal charge was decided later.

Evans said she will fight back in civil court over a host of issues and is thinking of starting her own National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws chapter, since the only two in Tennessee are university affiliated. In the meantime, she says she is no longer smoking or receiving other glaucoma treatments, because of concerns about side effects.

"I have stopped all conventional treatment for this rare form of glaucoma, and I realize I'm jeopardizing my quality of life. But if that's what I have to do to make a stand, ( I will )," she said.

She also said she will not go to a state with medical-use laws.

"Why should I be forced to move from a state that I've lived in for 10 years?"

Source: Knoxville News-Sentinel (TN)
Copyright: 2007 The Knoxville News-Sentinel Co.
Contact: letters@knews.com
Website: knoxnews.com : Knoxville, Tennessee, News, Business, Homes, Jobs, Cars & Information
 
Hello all, Jesse Johnson here.. The once child mentioned in this article.. Truth be told, I lied for my mother, because being home and able to do what I wanted was more appealing than being in a group home.. Although I don't hold any harsh opinions of marijuana use, I have endured abuse from my mother since before the referenced time, until recently. I'm still a cannabis user, by choice.. But she absolutely did expose me to it, along with other drugs, at a young age. I was 13 when she first started smoking with me and taking me to her pot dealers house so I could spend my allowance.. She also allowed me to smoke cigarettes. Around this same age i remember her giving me the leftovers of a crushed pain pill, and sometimes a Klonopin which she was prescribed.. And just 2.5 years after this, in the same county of jurisdiction, she beat a 3 foot hole in my bedroom door while myself, and who later became my wife were locked in for safety. She was charged with a domestic assault type offense. Fast forward.. 2011, again charged with an assault towards the same wife after calling her disgusting names to a point in which enough was enough, and anything was necessary to protect ourselves and escape her wrath. My ex wife did hit her first in response to her nastiness, and we did tell the police that she started it.. but considering our previous experience which was recorded on my laptop while she swung a horse "twitch" at my door for 15 minutes, we felt justified in getting her away from us by any means. That same week she was found lying in the road with an empty bottle of Klonopin in her pocket and a cross burnt into her hand, and Baker Acted into a mental institution. The officer in this article described her as irrational and suspected of abuse and neglect.. Well 18 years later and that is still accurate. I've finally escaped her at 33, and refuse to ever allow her to play the victim again. Please note, I do not suggest that cannabis was ever a factor in which I blame for her actions. She has always been mentally ill, and unfortunately I perhaps suffered the most from it. It's just time that the truth be told, as I've lost enough already.. She has a larger responsibility in my upbringing and what I've since endured than she could ever humbly accept. I am better. Now and forever. Without her.

❤️
 
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