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Marijuana Missionary

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

In an anonymous office park in this conservative city, a self-styled revolutionary is hard at work.

The sleeves of her brocade blazer pushed up, long auburn hair piled in a messy twist, Andrea Nagy is dispensing marijuana to a patient.

While the patient, who has undergone 13 intestinal surgeries in two years, waits in a nearby chair, Nagy drops buds of the illicit weed onto a digital scale.

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One-eighth of an ounce, $40.

“She’s an angel,” sighs Katie DiSilva, a 37-year-old mother, who says her ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease rage mercilessly without marijuana. “God’s on her side.”

If an angel, Nagy’s a controversial one.

It has taken all of four months for this slight 28-year-old spitfire to become one of Ventura County’s most infamous business owners--or primary caregivers, as Nagy prefers to be considered.

It was in September that the legal secretary turned pot crusader opened the Rainbow Country Ventura County Medical Cannabis Center with half a dozen clients. Nagy’s Thousand Oaks dispensary now serves 46.

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With a single-minded ferocity, Nagy has forced the issue of medical marijuana use on the police, district attorney and elected officials in law-and-order Ventura County.

So far, they have treated her gingerly.

At every City Council hearing and in every newspaper possible, Nagy testifies that her patients need marijuana for their multiple sclerosis, cancer and AIDS. Personally, Nagy uses marijuana to treat chronic migraines.

Come narcs or personal bankruptcy, she is hellbent on distributing the drug she grows at her center. She has taken a leave from her secretary’s job to run the center, and says she has sunk thousands of dollars into the business.

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“I might be a freedom fighter because my parents fled communism,” said Nagy, whose family left Hungary when she was 11. “I think everyone owes it to themselves to claim their inalienable rights.”

But the county in which Nagy (pronounced Nadj) is staking her claim just happens to be a bastion of DARE classes and conservative politics.

Small wonder, then: Not everyone here cottons to Nagy’s cannabis crusade.

Some of Nagy’s critics grudgingly admit respect for her political savvy and freely express empathy for her patients. But they worry about the message her dispensary is sending.

Even many of those who oppose her cannabis center are reluctant to criticize Nagy publicly. Privately, some critics cite a criminal conviction and a string of motor vehicle violations that, they claim, suggest a pattern of lawlessness.

In 1991, Nagy was arrested, charged and convicted of cultivating marijuana in her Newbury Park home. She was sentenced to 250 hours community service and five years probation--later reduced to four.

An avowed lead foot, Nagy estimates that she has had a dozen speeding tickets in as many years. Her court records show 11 motor vehicle citations since 1990.

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Just last month, a jury convicted her of reckless driving in connection with an incident where Nagy was zipping along the Ventura Freeway at speeds of 85 mph or greater, according to court records. She was sentenced to 36 months probation and 10 days in a work-release program. Saying that she should have been charged with speeding, not reckless driving, Nagy has appealed.

“The big thing that occurred to me when I looked at the case was that she has a problem with authority figures and the law,” said prosecutor Ryan Wright. “I think even her lawyer acknowledged that. She is more than assertive.” Critics stress that federal law clearly outlaws growing, possessing or distributing pot, although California voters approved a medical marijuana initiative, Proposition 215, in 1996.

“I mean, we’re teaching our kids to ‘just say no’ to drugs,” said Thousand Oaks Mayor Mike Markey, a retired police officer who wants Nagy’s shop shuttered. “And she’s here selling marijuana?”

But, he added, Nagy is canny in her tactics. She obtained a business license for her dispensary, has met with law enforcement and brings a crowd of patients to public hearings.

“She’s working the system,” he said. “In my mind, I don’t know if she’s smart or what, but she knows how to work the system.”

“She certainly seems to be a professional person,” said Thousand Oaks City Councilwoman Elois Zeanah, who refused in December to shut down Nagy’s business. “And she’s certainly being hounded right now. We’ll see how strong she is. It takes a strong person to receive the hounding she is receiving now and not buckle.”

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Nagy says her interest in medical cannabis--and marijuana legalization, period--comes from personal experience.

Her searing migraines first started in puberty. A joint offered by a friend when Nagy was 13 loosened the muscles and eased the pain, almost immediately. Nagy was convinced.

At the same time that Nagy--the daughter of a baker and a physical therapist--was using marijuana to treat herself, she also became a budding activist.

During high school, Nagy served on Thousand Oaks’ youth council, which advises city leaders on teenagers’ concerns. She moved briefly to Indiana with her mother and missed enough school to face this decision: repeat a year at Thousand Oaks High School or finish out classes at the continuation high school.

She chose the latter, and became senior class president at Conejo Valley High School.

Viewing legal prohibitions against marijuana as ridiculous, Nagy took to growing her own headache remedy--as her criminal record attests.

Now working on her associate’s degree at Moorpark College, the Thousand Oaks resident hopes to become an environmental lawyer.

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Those who know her best say Nagy can accomplish almost anything she sets her mind to.

In this case, she sits in the middle of a legal thicket.

While no one has moved to shut Nagy down, law enforcement is keeping tabs on her business. Sheriff’s deputies have dropped by twice to check on her club--which so far has generated one unsubstantiated citizen complaint. The second time, they came with video cameras.

“Nobody wants to take medicine from someone who is seriously ill or dying,” said sheriff’s Capt. Chris Godfrey. “The state law allowing them to use marijuana they grow themselves has to be respected. But that has to be balanced against the public health and safety concerns that her marijuana storefront is opening a Pandora’s Box.”

Although her cannabis center has a “pharmaceutical-related” business license, Nagy lacks a certificate of occupancy from the city. That means she can’t apply for further permits that would allow her to make any renovations to help grow her flourishing crop.

A judge recently refused to order the city to grant the certificate.

Although the City Council has failed to muster enough votes to impose a moratorium on medical marijuana outlets, Nagy isn’t exactly welcomed with open arms either. City leaders will examine the medical marijuana issue at a Feb. 3 meeting.

Two city officials--Markey and Councilman Andy Fox--have asked the U.S. attorney’s office to look closely at Nagy’s shop and crops. The federal prosecutors have been in contact with local officials, said U.S. attorney’s spokesman Thom Mrozek.

“We have not taken, as of this time, any enforcement activity against the marijuana club,” he said. Meantime, federal officials are trying to shut down six cannabis centers in Northern California.

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And there is the small matter of suspicious-looking men in dark suits hanging around Nagy’s house and office, she says. Nagy reports being watched at least three days in the last week.

“It was the same people in the same suits in the same car just sitting around and walking by,” Nagy said. “They said they were investors looking at the [office] building. Right.”

Times staff writer Tracy Wilson contributed to this story.

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