Source: Orange County Register (CA) Contact: http://www.ocregister.com/ Pubdate: Thu, 13 Apr 1998 CHAVEZ STORY UPDATE Although grateful to the Register's editorial staff and (Metro columnist) Gorden Dillow for their support of Orange County's Doctor-Patient_nurse Cannibis Co-Op founder Marvin Chavez' courageous battle to bring medicinal marijuana to sick and dying people, I feel compelled to respond to certain innuendoes and mischaracterizations. On Aug. 5, Chavez decided to stand on principal and reject a very humane offer to negotiate the case by Judge Robert Fitzgerald. At no time did attorney Robert Kennedy or i ever instruct Chavez to accept an offer that I have never communicated to the media or tell him that it was the "smart move"as erroneously stated by Dillow["Co-Op founder opts to take a gutsy step,"Metro,Aug.6]. Further,an editorial piece just days before referred to Kennedy and I as "busy lawyers with heavy trial calenders" who seemingly desire a quick,easy resolution to the case is equally false. Bob Kennedy and I watched our respective son and father die slowly and agonizingly of cancer,without the therapeutic benefit marijuana might have provided due to a Dark Ages mentality that would have driven them into dark alleys for that relief.We accepted Marvin's case pro bono and have logged substantial time and expense in his defense.We expect no remuneration,financial or otherwise,and have unswervingly stood steadfast behind his cause and defense. The Register's protrayal of our commitment to Chavez,Proposition 215 and all those sick and dying people who benefit from them as less than assiduous is uninformed and untrue. We eagerly look forward to answering the bell for trial on Aug.24 and arguing Chavez' case to the people who enacted the Compassionate Use Act-the voters of California and Orange County. Jon Alexander-Dana Point Mr. Alexander is defense counsel for Marvin Chavez. - --- Checked-by: (Joel W. Johnson)