End of the rainbow.Tom Crosslin Tom Crosslin (c. 1955 in Indiana – September 3, 2001 near Vandalia, Michigan) was a marijuana activist who was shot and killed on his "Rainbow Farm" by an FBI agent. Rainbow Farm didn't envision a violent confrontation with the government when he started holding cannabis-themed music festivals in rural Cass County, Michigan Cass County is a county in the U.S. state of Michigan. As of the 2000 census, the population was 51,104. It is part of the South Bend-Mishawaka, Indiana, metropolitan area which has a total population of 316,663. The county seat is Cassopolis6. , in 1995. But he faced a local prosecutor, Scott Teter, who was determined to shut down the gatherings on Crosslin's property, known as Rainbow Farm Coordinates: Rainbow Farm was a campground in Vandalia, Michigan, run by Tom Crosslin and his lover Rolland "Rollie" Rohm and home to two controversial festivals, HempAid on Memorial Day and Roach Roast on Labor Day. . Teter got the legal justification he needed after a May 2001 raid, ostensibly os·ten·si·ble adj. Represented or appearing as such; ostensive: His ostensible purpose was charity, but his real goal was popularity. aimed at payroll records, found a marijuana grow room in the basement of the home Crosslin shared with his lover, Rollie Rohm. Teter immediately moved to seize the property and arranged to put Rohm's 11-year-old son in foster care. In response to these aggressive tactics, says Dean Kuipers, author of Burning Rainbow Farm (Bloomsbury), Crosslin "just snapped." After he and Rohm missed an August 2001 court date, the police came looking for Looking for In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with. them. In September a five-day standoff left Rainbow Farm in flames In Flames is a melodic death metal band from Gothenburg, Sweden founded in 1990. Along with Dark Tranquillity and At the Gates, they pioneered what is now known as melodic death metal. and both men dead. Senior Editor Jacob Sullum Jacob Z. Sullum (born September 5, 1965) is a syndicated newspaper columnist and a Senior Editor at Reason magazine. In 2004, he received a Thomas S. Szasz Award. [1] Sullum is the author of: Q: What did you find compelling about this story? A: People were lining the streets holding signs saying, "Don't Kill Our Friends," "We Support Rainbow Farm," "Tom and Rollie Are Innocent." One of the signs said, "Remember Waco, Ruby Ridge, Rainbow Farm," before the guys were even killed. For people who are criminals, that doesn't happen. It seemed like this event turned the whole county upside down. Q: What sort of crowd was attracted to Rainbow Farm? A: Tom and Rollie were basically libertarian. They were right-wing to a certain extent. They voted for both Bushes, and they very much adhered to a belief system in which they wanted the government out of their bedroom, they wanted it out of their bodies, and they wanted it out of their pocketbook--they wanted fewer taxes, less regulation, all that. The people who came to Rainbow Farm responded to all parts of that. They included Democrats, Republicans, a lot of third-party people, religious people, evangelicals, atheists, the Michigan Militia. That's a pretty diverse stew. Q: What lesson do you want readers to draw from this case? A: When you think about the drug war, you think about helicopters over Colombia. But really it's these sheriffs knocking on people's doors, busting them for weed. And the people who were upset about that, we never hear from them. Rainbow Farm was in the middle of this conservative area. All these relatively conservative people came out to protest, to say, "That's just wrong." I just don't think that message is getting through to Washington. Interview by Jacob Sullum |
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