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Dennis Peron, father of medical marijuana in California, dies at 72

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Dennis Peron, father of medical marijuana in California, dies at 72

 

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FILE PHOTO: Marijuana activist Dennis Peron sits outside Oaksterdam University, a trade school for the cannabis industry, in Oakland, California, U.S., July 23, 2009. REUTERS/Robert Galbraith/File Photo

 

(Reuters) - Dennis Peron, the cannabis activist who fired up the movement to legalize medical marijuana in California, died on Saturday in a San Francisco hospital. He was 72.

 

Also a prominent figure in San Francisco's gay community, he was credited as a pioneer in recognizing the health benefits of pot during the height of the AIDS crisis in the 1980s.

 

"A man that changed the world," was how his brother Jeffrey Peron remembered him on Facebook. "It is with a heavy heart that I announce the passing of my brother Dennis Peron."

 

Peron, a friend of slain gay rights activist Harvey Milk, helped push through a San Francisco ordinance that allowed the use of medical marijuana. That was seen as a precursor to the statewide legalization of medical pot in 1996 with the passage of California Proposition 215.

 

Today, medical marijuana is legal in most U.S. states and Washington, D.C.

 

Peron suffered lung cancer and lost his partner, Jonathan West, to AIDS in 1990.

 

Born in New York, he was drafted in the late 1960s to serve in Vietnam, where he first encountered cannabis, according to media reports his brother posted on Facebook.

 

At the height of the U.S. war on drugs in the early 1990s, he founded the San Francisco Cannabis Buyers Club, the nation's first public marijuana dispensary.

 

He was arrested several times and was once shot in the leg by a police officer, the San Francisco Chronicle reported.

 

"Not many people would have had the courage at the time that he took up the mantle," Terrance Alan, a member of the city's Cannabis Commission, told the newspaper.

 

(Reporting by Barbara Goldberg in New York; Editing by Daniel Wallis)

 
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-- © Copyright Reuters 2018-01-29

A post commenting on moderation has been removed.

May he have days full of 420s as he flies about in the clouds. RIP.

He is survived by his wife, Mary Jane, and their children Bud and Blossom.

5 hours ago, Emster23 said:

He is survived by his wife, Mary Jane, and their children Bud and Blossom.

This is your idea of humor?

Jeez, a name I haven't heard in years.

In the 1970s San Francisco unofficially de-criminalized small amounts of weed, less than 1 ounce.  He campaigned to challenge that as hypocritical: where does that single ounce originate from?  He used to deal, and a certain cafe was known to be his unofficial place of business.  He even ran for mayor one year.

This, of course, was before we knew what AIDS was and before MMJ.

 

I guess a lot of us would like to do some good while we're alive, and in the long course of human history he'll go unnoticed, but he made a difference in his moment.  That is an accomplishment.

 

 

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