Burning Rainbow Farm Book Review

Seattle Post-Intelligencer

Ruby Ridge, Waco — and Rainbow Farm?

 

The first two sites of notorious government violence within the United States seared their way into the American consciousness, but the third site remains largely unknown outside the Midwest. That’s because the outrage on a 54- acre farm in […]

By |2019-06-19T07:57:45-08:00August 18th, 2006|Press|Comments Off on Burning Rainbow Farm Book Review

Property forfeiture: gateway law to chaos?

Seattle Times

Every so often I read a book that stays with me for days. “Burning Rainbow Farm: How a Stoner Utopia Went Up in Smoke” (Bloomsbury, 374 pp., $24.95), the story of how two pro-marijuana activists were killed in 2001 on their Michigan farm, is such […]

By |2019-06-19T07:57:45-08:00August 11th, 2006|Press|Comments Off on Property forfeiture: gateway law to chaos?

A tragic tale of conflicting agendas

Chicago Tribune

Dean Kuipers’ “Burning Rainbow Farm” chronicles a forgotten chapter of a struggle peculiar to a nation founded by landed rebels: how to balance the social benefits of strict law and order with the ideals of individual freedom and property rights.

 

Kuipers tells the story of a […]

By |2019-06-19T07:57:45-08:00August 6th, 2006|Press|Comments Off on A tragic tale of conflicting agendas

Rainbow Warriors

LA Times

WHAT’S a high-school-dropout, Harley-riding, long-haul-trucking, fist-fighting, George W. Bush-supporting, pot-smoking, gay rural Midwestern real estate investor to do when he gets close to 40? For Tom Crosslin, the answer was simple: Buy a 34-acre semi-fallow farm in Michigan’s Cass County, move there with a lover 19 […]

By |2019-06-19T07:57:46-08:00August 6th, 2006|Press|Comments Off on Rainbow Warriors

In These Times

In These Times

The motto of Rainbow Farm in Vandalia, Mich., could have been “A Working-Class Hippie Is Something to Be.” On Memorial and Labor Day weekends from 1996 to 2000, a few thousand amplifier-factory workers, hippie girls and truckers’ wives-turned-political-activists camped out there to smoke weed, listen […]

By |2006-07-18T00:57:27-08:00July 18th, 2006|Press|Comments Off on In These Times

Utopia Gone to Pot

Lux Esto

Surrounded by forces in blue, and most every other color of uniform, Rainbow Farm blazed in a fury of flames while guns were trained on the two owners as they emerged: first, Tom Crosslin, 46, then his much younger lover, Rolland “Rollie” Rohm, 28. Crosslin was […]

By |2019-06-19T07:57:46-08:00July 7th, 2006|Press|Comments Off on Utopia Gone to Pot

Lansing City Pulse

Lansing City Pulse

There was no pot of gold at the end of this rainbow only fire, destruction, death and the end of a dream. In 1997, when Tom Crosslin decided to call his 34 acres near Vandalia, Michigan Rainbow Farm it had nothing to do with gays, […]

By |2019-06-19T07:57:46-08:00June 22nd, 2006|Press|Comments Off on Lansing City Pulse

Ashes at the end of Rainbow Farm

Detroit News

Some call it Michigan’s own mini-Waco.

 

Just one week before the September 11 terrorist attacks, FBI and state police sharpshooters took out the two owners of a pro-marijuana, libertarian enterprise known as Rainbow Farm in the southwest corner of the state.

 

The dead men, Tom […]

By |2019-06-19T07:57:46-08:00June 20th, 2006|Press|Comments Off on Ashes at the end of Rainbow Farm

Casualties of War: 'Burning Rainbow Farm' chronicles the unnecessary death of two men in the anti-drug crusade

San Diego Union-Tribune

In a famous 1928 U.S. Supreme Court dissent, Justice Louis Brandeis articulated what he believed was a cherished constitutional right — “the right to be left alone.”

 

Tom Crosslin and Rollie Rohm built a life around that notion, and then died for it. In this […]

By |2019-06-19T07:57:46-08:00June 18th, 2006|Press|Comments Off on Casualties of War: 'Burning Rainbow Farm' chronicles the unnecessary death of two men in the anti-drug crusade

Way Beyond Stoned

Nashville Scene

Why were a couple of gay Republican potheads blown away by the FBI?

On Monday, Sept. 3, 2001, at 5:25 p.m., FBI special agent Richard Salomon, from a distance of less than 10 yards and using a bureau-issued .308 sniper rifle, shot Tom Crosslin between the […]

By |2019-06-19T07:57:46-08:00June 15th, 2006|Press|Comments Off on Way Beyond Stoned