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- Message-ID: <-1289228322.3252479@ucommon1.commonlink.com>
- Date: 18 Aug 1994 20:49:35 -0000
- From: Carl_E._Olsen@commonlink.com (Carl E. Olsen)
- Subject: COPTIC LOUV STORY
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
-
- LOUV STORY
- Are Brother Louv and his Zion Coptic Church facing the Last Judgment?
- Tropic, The Miami Herald, August 2, 1981
-
- His real name is Thomas Reilly, but you probably know him only as Brother
- Louv of the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church. For several years, the members of
- this church have outraged the community by their blatant use of marijuana,
- which they call ganja and consider a sacrament. Because the law calls it
- dope and considers it illegal, nine church members were convicted this year
- of smuggling. In the fall, Reilly goes on trial and could be sent to jail
- for life. Is the system harassing this religion unfairly, or are the Coptics
- nothing but big-time smugglers? The story begins on page 6. The cover
- photograph is by Mary Lou Foy.
-
- THE LAW AND BROTHER LOUV
- Are they persecuting a church or prosecuting a smuggler?
- By CARL HIAASEN
- CARL HIAASEN is a Miami Herald staff writer
- One night early last year, in the foyer of the large house at 43 Star
- Island, a bony, balding man of 6-foot-7 danced on his toes, popping knobby
- fists into the air.
- "I can feel the noose loosen around my neck," he said with a snaggletoothed
- grin. "I hope they bring on the biggest, meanest f------ they got. That's
- the one I want to beat.
- The shadowboxer was Thomas Francis Reilly Jr., better known as Brother Louv,
- ambassador of the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church. "They" was the U.S.
- government.
-
- It was February 1980, a heady time for Reilly and the Coptics. Fresh from a
- "60 Minutes" segment, they felt sure the U.S. Supreme Court would listen to
- their arguments for the sacramental use of marijuana, which they call ganja.
- And they had high hopes for an unusual legal petition, filed by their
- attorneys with a Miami judge, that put forth a comprehensive case for the
- relative harmlessness of cannabis sativa.
- In that motion, former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark had asked the
- government to dismiss a list of serious smuggling-related charges against the
- Coptics, arguing for the First Amendment rights of the church faithful to
- smoke marijuana during prayer.
- This is why Reilly was so elated. For once the lawyers had done what the
- Coptics wanted, which was to tell the world that nothing is wrong with
- marijuana. Medical doctors, psychiatrists, research scientists, cancer
- victims, and glaucoma patients testified for the Coptics in pretrial
- hearings.
- It is hard to tell whether Reilly, who is an intelligent man, really
- believed that U.S. District Judge William Hoeveler was going to go for this
- approach. Hoeveler didn't. He said the issue was smuggling, not religion,
- so the Coptics went to trial.
- The government turned out to be bigger and meaner than Reilly had
- anticipated. Two months ago a jury convicted nine out of nine Coptics on 45
- out of 45 smuggling and conspiracy counts.
- Reilly was spared only because his attorney got sick. He will go to trial
- again soon and, if convicted faces 10 years to life in prison. "I don't like
- that prospect," he says pensively now.
- Much has happened to the Coptic Church in recent months, none of it good.
- And if Reilly -- the most visible, articulate and telegenic of the Coptic
- leaders -- goes to prison, the future of the church of ganja would be in
- jeopardy.
- Of course, that would suit many people just fine: federal prosecutors, state
- prosecutors, drug agents, tax investigators, and the city of Miami Beach, for
- starters.
- When the television cameras are gone, and the lustrous ceremonial robes are
- closeted, Thomas Reilly stops preaching and starts talking like a man who's
- looking at a lot of jail time.
- "I'll be damned if I'm going to be considered a criminal because of ganja,"
- he says quietly. "It's a mismatch. One man is using his wits and his
- prayers, and the other is using guns and informers and stakeouts."
- There is no doubt that Reilly and the other Coptic leaders devoutly
- religious about marijuana. There is also no doubt, authorities say, that the
- Coptics are big-time dope smugglers; there is simply no other explanation for
- what has happened.
-
- By dint of an eager media and the congregation's own affection for the
- melodramatic, the Coptics have come to be regarded as something of a Miami
- Beach freak show, Cheech and Chong Get Religion.
- In fact, the rigid and narrow Coptic doctrine has more in common with Jerry
- Falwell. Among the modern "perversions" the Coptics sententiously denounce:
- birth control, abortion, fornication, adultery, oral sex, masturbation,
- homosexuality and the use of alcohol or any hard drugs.
- "If it weren't for the marijuana," Reilly likes to say, "we would be the
- Moral Majority."
- Through an open window at Star Island comes the sound of Psalms being
- recited by women and children, then slow singing. "This is our defense
- camp," he says, raising a smoke-stained hand.
- Reilly sits in a living room filled with fine furniture, heavy Jamaican
- mahogany. The carpets are Persian. A Betamax is in one corner. Reilly
- makes no apologies for the wealth of the church, or for the Cadillac and
- Mercedes-Benz in the driveway.
- He is 38, well-spoken and media-wise. Last year a UCLA psychiatrist tested
- Reilly's IQ at 150 -- "not bad for a guy who's supposed to be blown out."
- His white slacks and open shirt hang from a gaunt frame. As always, he
- wears sandals. Consistent with church tenets, he has not cut his hair in
- years. He is missing some front teeth.
- The ritual smoking that begins each morning before dawn continues "every
- minute of every day." Reilly cleans a long clay chillum pipe, then packs it
- with a 50-50 mixture of marijuana and tobacco. Hot embers are tapped into
- the open bowl, while a damp cloth is folded over the smoker's end to keep
- live sparks out of the lungs.
- The Coptics "partake" of marijuana in short inhalations. They condemn as
- sinful the deep-sucking recreational pot smokers. At Star Island there is no
- giddy joint-passing. At this meeting, after a full day of smoking, Reilly is
- about as atoned as your average F-I6 pilot. Which is to say, not at all.
-
- He came to the Coptic Church in 1970, one of many disenchanted Peace
- Movement dropouts who found their way to the hills of Jamaica. Reilly was
- born and raised in Boston, son of an RCA Victor sales executive, eldest of
- five children, a Catholic altar boy and prep school basketball ace who wanted
- nothing more than to attend West Point.
- Instead he came to the University of Miami, didn't make the basketball team
- ("Rick Barry was here then," he explains ruefully) and finally left school.
- He became a salesman at Litton Industries, eventually starting his own data
- processing business.
- Reilly smoked his first joint at 25. Later he moved to San Francisco,
- dropped some acid and began experimenting with other drugs. "I've known the
- life of a hippie, going from rock festival to rock festival, living out of a
- tent," he says. "I did all that."
- In Kingston, Jamaica, Reilly became fascinated with the ganja men. He
- "confessed" his sins to the elders of the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church, and
- was adopted as one of the first white brothers. His credo became the Book of
- Genesis, Chapter One, verses 29-31: "And God said, Behold I have given you
- every herb bearing seed ...."
- The "herb" was marijuana. The Burning Bush was marijuana. The plants on
- Solomon's grave were marijuana. Everywhere in the Bible, the Coptics assert,
- you find pot.
- Question: How do you know the Bible is talking about ganja?
- Reilly: History. Prophecy. Reality. I never questioned that. We're
- talking about communion. It is divinity.
- Q: But how do you know the Bible isn't talking about parsley, or ragweed?
- Other herbs?
- Reilly: Is the word ganja in the Bible? No. Is the word marijuana in the
- Bible? No. Is the Bible a medical dictionary, or is the Bible a book of
- mystics and symbols and parables?
- In other forms the same argument has been offered by other Coptics.
- "What else would you substitute, if not ganja?" demanded Laurenton Dickens,
- a black church elder who sometimes stays at Star Island. "It is my daily
- bread," he says, lighting a pipe. "It is the first thing I pick up when I
- rise in the morning, and the last thing I lay down when I go to sleep at
- night."
- "A burnt offering," said Clifton Ray Middleton, 32, a thin white Coptic
- priest. It was Middleton's wife, Jacquelyn Town, who purchased the verdant
- Star island compound six years ago for $270,000 cash. The money was provided
- by a Jamaican Coptic elder, Keith Gordon.
- Question: Where did the money come from?
- Middleton: Where do any churches get any of their money?
- Q: Tithing?
- Middleton: The wealth of the Coptic Church is the wealth of the black race.
- Several months after this interview, Middleton and 22 others, many of them
- Coptics, were arrested on the coast of Maine during a waterfront bust that
- netted about 27 tons of marijuana.
-
- In addition, Middleton -- who has used the names Peter Sheets and Stanley
- Gilmore -- was one of the nine Coptics convicted of smuggling in Miami last
- June; he awaits sentencing in that case. Today he is serving a 30-month term
- for a 1972 smuggling charge.
- Middleton's wife and newborn daughter wait at Star Island, which pokes into
- Biscayne Bay from the McArthur Causeway. Things here have been quiet; the
- neighbors have not complained recently.
- The Coptics' bayfront property has a 24-hour security guard. The big
- swimming pool has been drained and fenced off. The Coptics have planted
- potatoes, papaya trees and peas in the yard. Most of their food and meat
- comes from farmland they own off Chrome Avenue.
- The first floor of the main house at Star Island is decorated with religious
- wall hangings; there are also books and blackboards for the Coptic children,
- who do not attend public school. There is a video recording center, and a
- Telex machine with which Reilly can communicate instantly with the Coptics'
- freighter in the Caribbean.
- In the chapel area are pianos, organs and drums. This is where the Zion
- Coptics chant, pray and smoke their ganja, and they did so unmolested until
- 1978 when it all hit the fan.
-
- The Coptics say 43 Star Island is but an embassy; the headquarters of the
- Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church is in Jamaica.
- Although law enforcement authorities believe the church is merely a front
- for a massive pot-smuggling operation, the Florida Supreme Court has
- recognized the Coptic faith as a true religion whose doctrine stretches back
- 6,000 years.
- The exact heritage of the church, however, remains indistinct and
- fragmented. It was not incorporated until 1976. Its membership is debated:
- drug authorities say fewer than 200; Reilly says thousands.
- The Zion Coptics identify as their prophet Marcus Garvey, whose
- back-to-Africa exhortations in the 192Os gave birth to the Ethiopian Movement
- in Jamaica. But unlike the Rastafarians, who also believe in the ritualistic
- use of ganja, the Zion Coptics do not advocate the repatriation of a11 blacks
- to Africa. They believe the foundation of the black race is in Jamaica.
- The founder of the Coptic sect is said to be Louva Williams, a carpenter's
- son who began spreading the doctrine in Jamaica in the 1940s. It was
- Williams who devised the "reasoning" sessions, lengthy theological dialogues
- among the men of the church, accompanied always by marijuana smoking.
- Through Williams, the present Coptic doctrine took form. When he died in
- 1969, the church collapsed. Church lore has it that Williams' spirit
- appeared to George Baker Ivy, a young Jamaican who struggled to reassemble
- the scattered brethren.
- Ivy was the first elder to admit whites into the "camp," and in fact
- encouraged disaffected young Americans to come to the island and learn the
- ways of the ganja church. Reilly, Middleton and other young priests-to-be
- arrived soon afterward.
- "You know the last time I took a pill?" Reilly says. "I took LSD in an
- airplane over Cuba in 1970, on my way to Jamaica. And I met these brothers
- and I haven't taken an aspirin since then, haven't talked to a doctor. I was
- converted, I was resurrected, I was cleansed, whatever you want to call it, I
- found the culture of the ganja men."
- Reilly and his middle-class companions turned their backs on worldly
- "corruption" to embrace the rigorous and inflexible Coptic doctrine. The men
- follow the Levitican laws against cutting their hair or beards. Women have a
- "servile" position in the church; they must cover their hair, arms and legs
- at all time in public.
- Within the church there is no marriage ceremony: a man who sleeps with a
- woman simply is considered her husband for life. She is expected to "be
- fruitful" and have babies.
- On these matters, the Zion Coptic Church is intransigent.
- Unlike most denominations which label themselves Christian, the Coptic
- Church does not worship Jesus Christ in a traditional role. Rather, Coptics
- believe Him to be a black man, crucified not in Jerusalem but in Jamaica, in
- an act of racial aggression.
- Moreover, the Coptics believe in the concept of "Jes-us," a living God
- embodied within all men. Attaining this state of self-perfection requires
- constant prayers, and the prayers require ganja. A whole heap of ganja.
-
- The obscurity of the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church ended on Nov. 28, 1977.
- That was the day police raided a farm in the North Florida town of Dunnellon
- and found 27,738 pounds of marijuana hidden in a barn and in an elaborate
- system of tunnels. The property belonged to one Peter Sheets, actually
- Clifton Middleton.
- Among those busted was another prominent American Coptic, an Iowa law school
- graduate named Carl D. Swanson. Swanson was released on bail, but he didn't
- stay out of trouble long.
- On Feb. 2, 1978, police staking out a secluded area along the Cross-Florida
- Barge Canal arrested Swanson and 15 other suspects during an alleged
- marijuana offloading operation. Nineteen tons of grass were seized, as was a
- 68-foot motor yacht which had been purchased by the Coptics for $225,000
- cash.
- A Cadillac belonging to Thomas Reilly also was confiscated at the offloading
- site. It was the closest police would ever come to catching Brother Louv at
- a smuggling operation.
- Even more damaging to the church was the arrest at the scene of Zion Coptic
- elder Keith Gordon, known reverently as "Niah" to his Jamaican followers.
- Within a month, the Internal Revenue Service revoked the tax-exempt status
- of the church and socked it with a $3-million lien (still pending). Not far
- behind was the U.S. Customs Service, which levied a $15-million import
- penalty against the Coptics for failing to declare the 19 tons of grass as
- cargo. "If they give it back," Reilly offered good-humoredly, "we'll pay the
- tax."
- Government investigators became curious about the source of the Coptic
- wealth. IRS Agent Mike Marr testified that, between 1973 and 1977, church
- members spent $910,O00 cash on a small flotilla.
- The church response: Its income was legitimately derived from "substantial"
- holdings in Jamaica, including property, a container company, a trucking firm
- and an auto parts agency.
- One man who thought, then as now, that the church was a front for smuggling
- was Manny Funes, an agent for the Florida Department of Law Enforcement
- (FDLE). Reilly says Funes is "our most bitterest enemy," for it was Funes
- who helped the U.S. government piece together its successful case against the
- Coptics.
- "It is my opinion that they are the biggest exporters of marijuana in
- Jamaica," Funes says. "What we've done is not stopped them one bit, insofar
- as the smuggling goes. We've slowed them down ... but we haven't stopped
- them."
- As the full weight of the state and federal government came down on the
- Church in 1978 and 1979, the city of Miami Beach was receiving complaints
- from the Coptics' Star Island neighbors. The big problem was the prayer
- chants, at all hours of the day, and the accompanying, distinctive odor of
- marijuana.
- A Beach police raid netted $91,000 cash and a few marijuana sprouts, but
- public opinion was ignited most by television footage showing Coptic children
- toking on stogie-sized marijuana "spliffs." Curious teenagers began to
- gather outside the Coptic gates.
- The Dade State Attorney's Office asked for -- and won -- an injunction
- banning pot smoking at 43 Star Island.
- Thomas Reilly had by now christened himself Brother Louv and was conducting
- regular press conferences. "Have you ever heard of the attempted liquidation
- of a church?" he stormed. "No murder. No robbery. Just marijuana. Is that
- historic or not?"
- Said Clifton Middleton: "The ganja smokers of America are the silent
- majority. We will win."
-
- But the Coptics have not won much of anything so far.
- Although the Florida Supreme Court conceded that the Coptics' use of
- marijuana "is an essential portion of the religious practice," it also upheld
- the local ban on pot smoking at 43 Star Island. "A threat to public safety
- and welfare," the Court declared.
- Arguing that they had as much right to use marijuana as the Navajo Indians
- do to use peyote, church members appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court. Last
- October the High Court refused to hear the case.
- Dade Assistant State Attorney Arthur Berger, who represented the state,
- asserted that the Coptics' argument was phony: "It's like Al Capone setting
- up a saloon during Prohibition. Instead of calling himself a racketeer, he
- says, 'I'm a high priest. Come join my church.' You think he'll get
- converts? Hell, yes!"
- More bad news came to the Coptics two weeks after the High Court rebuffed
- them. A boat called Jubilee landed off the coast of Maine with 1,263 bales
- of Colombian marijuana. Middleton and several other Coptics -- six of them
- fugitives -- were arrested at the scene.
- Hemorrhaging badly from legal fees and bail demands, the Coptics did not
- need another multiton bust. Reilly says the Maine fiasco has already cost
- them more than $1 million. The trials are set for September.
- Question: The government says the Coptics were going to sell this stuff,
- that it wasn't for personal use ... was this grass going to be sold on the
- street?
- Reilly: No. Why couldn't it be for personal use?
- Q. But the government is going to say, 'We could see a couple hundred
- pounds for personal use, maybe, but not 27 tons.
- Reilly: Does the Catholic Church -- St. Peter's or whatever it is here --
- go out and buy three quarts of wine for next Sunday, or does it buy 100
- cases?
-
- Milton Ferrell, Jr. is a tall and gregarious defense lawyer, an
- ex-prosecutor. He genuinely likes his Coptic clients, but admits he's had
- easier times behind the defense table.
- "I represent a good many drug smugglers," Ferrell says, "and, you know they
- are always so grateful when I show up to help `em. 'Milton, I'll do whatever
- you want me to, I'll say whatever you want me to. Here, take the money.
- Just get me off!"
- "Not these people. They are proud of what they are doing. They tell the
- government, `Hell, yes, I've got marijuana, and I've got the right to do
- it.'"
- Besides Ferrell, the Coptics have retained a battery of top lawyers --
- Ramsey Clark, former State Attorney Richard Gerstein, Murray Sams, Terry
- McWilliams, to name a few. The Coptics are not impressed. By and large,
- they despise all lawyers. Reilly says they are a necessary evil.
- They are most necessary because early on the morning of Nov. 20, 1979, a tow
- truck used by the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) rammed the wrought
- iron gates at 43 Star Island, followed by 35 cops armed with a 15-page
- federal indictment.
- Nineteen persons, mostly Coptics, were charged with conspiracy to violate
- the Controlled Substances Act. Additionally, Reilly, Middleton and Keith
- Gordon were accused of conducting a continuing criminal enterprise, a huge
- pot-smuggling ring.
- One prominent Coptic not named as a defendant was Carl Swanson. He had been
- decapitated when a small pot-laden airplane clipped a radio tower and crashed
- in the Everglades in September 1979.
- In sweeping fashion, the U.S. government accused church members of using
- ships, airplanes and outright bribery to smuggle 105 tons of marijuana into
- the country since 1973. Included in the government's tally of tonnage --
- which the Coptics say was ludicrous -- were the 19 tons from the
- Cross-Florida Barge Canal and the 14 tons from the barn in Dunnellon.
- After his arrest at Star Island, Thomas Reilly was taken in handcuffs to the
- federal courthouse, where he gave Miami television viewers a memorable
- moment. "I'm a priest, man!" he shouted to reporters over his shoulder.
- "Look what they're doing to a f------ priest!"
-
- January 1980. White Horses, Jamaica.
- "You got a light?"
- Daniel is a bouncy Coptic kid with hay-colored hair down to the middle of
- his back. Poised in his 7-year-old hand is a joint the size of a Dutch
- Masters.
- "Got a light?" he asks again, then prances away.
- "Some of them are real burners, laughs Alan Meyerson. "They can smoke 10
- times as much as you."
- Meyerson is acting as tour guide at Coptic Heights, world headquarters for
- the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church. The compound sits high in the steep hills
- of White Horses, an impoverished farming district 30 miles north of Kingston.
- From the summit, the vista in all directions is Coptic, at least 2,000
- acres.
- "Our nation," says Meyerson, a white Coptic priest. "This is to show the
- world what the ganja man can do."
- "Where did the church get the money for this land?"
- "This isn't from money, this is from the labor of our hands. Do you see any
- money here? Money isn't the problem or solution. You might as well ask
- where the banana plant comes from."
- A Jeep tour of Coptic Heights is arranged. The driver is young Paul Toledo,
- late of Miami Beach, who puffs heartily on a spliff while negotiating the
- mountain roads with enviable certitude.
- On all sides is the Coptic farm: plantain, red peas, carrots, yams,
- pumpkins, papayas, tobacco, cane, pineapples, cocoa and peanuts. In four
- years the church has turned fallow land into one of the island's most
- productive farm communities. Coptic Heights is self-reliant, with its own
- reservoir, irrigation system, gas depot, generator, even its own sawmill.
- The lend is turned by more than a thousand workers, many non-Coptics.
- Above the farmlands is the church itself, a modest round structure with a
- slight dome beneath a luminous sign.
- Though the church claims thousands of black Jamaican followers, there are
- only about 60 in residence on the farm. Many have assigned responsibilities:
- the motor pool, the cattle herds, the peanut fields.
- Brother Alan Meyerson is not involved in such details. He is on the phone
- frequently to Thomas Reilly at Star Island, plotting strategy. It was
- Meyerson, for example, who arranged a visit by several physicians to examine
- Jamaican church members who have been smoking marijuana for year.
- Though the examinations were brief and limited, the conclusions were
- laudatory. Typical were the findings of Dr. Arthur Fournier, University of
- Miami School of Medicine: "I could determine no evidence -- on history or
- physical examination -- of any adverse effects on their health which could be
- attributed to the long-term smoking of marijuana."
- One of the subjects studied was the man believed by many to be the head of
- the whole church, Keith Gordon, "Niah" himself. It was Gordon who supposedly
- selected this spot as Coptic Heights, who pointed to a barren hillside and
- commanded his minions to dig, whereupon they unearthed the natural spring
- which today nourishes the Coptic valleys.
- Gordon sits in a deep soft chair, a shy Coptic woman on his left, awaiting
- orders. Like most Coptic men, Gordon carries a towel slung over one
- shoulder. Every now and then he pauses to hack into it. He has been smoking
- ganja for 33 years, and that adds up to one ferocious cough.
- A federal arrest warrant still awaits Gordon in Miami. He has offered to
- give himself up, but U.S. prosecutors have not extradited him because of a
- gap in Jamaican laws that essentially makes it impossible to prosecute Gordon
- for conspiracy here.
- Gordon: Dey say I bring in 20 tons. Liars. Where is it? We don't break
- no law. We don't commit no crimes. Two hundred fifdy dousand people march
- in San Francisco and call themselves gay! Ha! Dare are no indictments about
- dat. Why not?
- Question: Are you innocent of the smuggling charges? Or do you say that
- there is nothing wrong with ganja, and therefore you have done nothing wrong?
- Gordon: What dey say I do, I didn't do. And dere's nothing wrong wid ganja
- ... who do you tink made the herb?
- Q: God?
- Gordon: Do you tink He make someding bad for you? No. You can't f--- wid
- God's work.
- FDLE agent Manny Funes says that Keith Gordon is the brains behind the
- Coptics. Clifton Middleton is the organizer and Thomas Reilly is the
- mouthpiece. However, Kingston journalist Arthur Kitchens believes Reilly
- runs the whole show from Miami Beach.
- Although the use of ganja is as old as Jamaica, the Zion Coptic Church has
- not been a powerful religious movement. During one court hearing in Miami,
- anthropologist Tasfaye Gulilat, a member of the Ethiopian Orthodox Coptic
- Church, testified he had never heard of the Zion Coptics until he saw some
- news film on television.
- "We are exalted here," Meyerson says.
- Coptic Heights is laid out so that the road up the mountains to the main
- gate is clearly visible from the church and living quarters. When Jamaican
- police stage a raid, as they sometimes do, the Coptics can literally see them
- coming a mile away. By the time the cops arrive, the ganja is usually
- stashed out of sight.
- Three times a day the church members file into the tabernacle -- men in the
- center, women in back -- passing pipes and spliffs while children lead the
- Psalms and singing. The prayer sessions last hours, often into the early
- morning, drums keeping time.
- All oblations are voluntary, which becomes a significant consideration at 3
- in the morning as the singing breaks like a wave over the dark Jamaican
- valley. If all this is really a fraud, the Coptics are going to epic lengths
- to preserve the charade.
- Even Manny Funes, who has played a large role in the Coptics' prosecution,
- admires their zeal.
- "You know, they never shaved their heads or their beards to disguise
- themselves, and that would have made it very difficult to identify them," he
- says.
- "That's why I think they believe in something. They believe in marijuana as
- a sacrament."
- In a few weeks, Thomas Reilly will go on trial for allegedly spearheading a
- conspiracy to import a mountain of marijuana in the name of the Ethiopian
- Zion Coptic Church.
- Federal prosecutor Barbara Schwartz has not yet decided whether or not to
- ask for a life sentence if Reilly is convicted. "I definitely think he is a
- danger to the community, and to the country as a whole, with this smuggling
- operation," she says.
- On the issue of smuggling, Reilly is coy. On charges that the Coptics
- intended to peddle the pot they were caught with, he is adamant in his
- denials. "I would so much rather have a constitutional trial on the issue of
- ganja and our generation," Reilly says.
- The government would rather not. The court will likely be most interested
- in two subjects that the Coptics do not like to discuss: how they get their
- money, and how they get their marijuana.
- Reilly promises, "It will be a clash of light and darkness, not, 'Where were
- you that night?'"
-
- It would he simple for Brother Louv to shed forever the drug agents, the tax
- man, the prosecutors, so easy to hop a Learjet and melt safely into the hills
- of Jamaica with his mentor Keith Gordon.
- But that would prove nothing, and leave the Zion Coptic Church voiceless in
- the United States. So Reilly says he's prepared for jail: "I'd rather be a
- martyr than a fugitive." Any good priest, he explains between puffs, would
- do the same.
-
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