[31 ASR2d 148]
v.
ABRAHAM JOHN MAPU,
Defendant
High Court of
Trial Division
CR No. 78-96
January 23, 1997
[1]
In
[2] Marijuana need not appear in its "recognizable" or "customary" form for an individual to be guilty of unlawful possession of marijuana. The Fono has explicitly included marijuana resin as a disallowed controlled substance and did not distinguish between typical and atypical forms if marijuana resin.
Before KRUSE, Chief Justice, VAIVAO, Associate Judge, and ATIULAGI, Associate Judge.
Counsel: For Plaintiff, John W. Cassell, Assistant Attorney General
For Defendant, Reginald E. Gates, Public Defender
Order Denying Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss:
FACTS[31 ASR2d
149]
On or
about October 16, 1996, customs officers at the
[1] In
Defendant acknowledges that he was found in possession of
an 18 inch bong with marijuana resin on its walls. However, he moves to dismiss the charge
against him on the grounds that some state courts have inferred that a statute
proscribing possession of a controlled substance assumes, as a matter of equity
and common sense, that the quantity of the controlled substance be large enough
for a person to use the controlled substance for its common purpose. Additionally, defendant posits that the
statutory prohibition of possessing a controlled substance assumes that the
substance will not be "residues, much altered from their original form." Under this second theory, a defendant
will not be guilty of possessing a controlled substance if there is insufficient
evidence to support an inference that the defendant knew of the presence and
narcotic character of the residues.
We
need not answer the first question of law defendant has presented. Even if this court were to find that the
statute only forbids possession of a "usable" amount of marijuana, see, e.g.,
People v. Leal, 413 P.2d 665, 670 (Cal. 1966), there is sufficient evidence
in the record for a reasonable fact-finder to conclude that the marijuana resin
was of sufficient quantity that one could chip the resin off the bong and smoke
it for hallucinogenic effect, i.e., use it for its common
purpose.
[2]
Second, we
categorically reject the proposition that marijuana must appear in its
"recognizable" or "customary" form for an individual to be[31 ASR2d 150] guilty of unlawful
possession of marijuana. See, e.g.,
Finally, we are not impressed with defendant's contention
that "there is insufficient evidence to support an inference that the defendant
knew of the presence and narcotic character of the residues." The fact that marijuana resin was found
on a "bong," an instrument which may be used for the consumption of marijuana,
is sufficiently suggestive of knowledge not only as to the resin's presence but
its narcotic character.
Defendant's arguments are unpersuasive. Accordingly, the motion to dismiss is
hereby DENIED.
It is
so ordered.