*356 Opinion
Defendant is a member of a church which uses marijuana as a sacrament. He was convicted of transportation of more than 28.5 grams of marijuana in violation of Health and Safety Code section 11360, subdivision (a), and of possession of marijuana for sale in violation of section 11359 of that code. His principal contention is that the court erred in rejecting his defense based on his right of free exercise of religion.
I
Factual and Procedural Background
Defendant was apprehended at the border patrol checkpoint in Temecula driving a car with 40 pounds of marijuana in the trunk. The marijuana was divided into bags of about one pound each. Cash in the amount of $2,350 was found under the dash cover. The wholesale value of the marijuana was about $40,000.
Defendant is president and a priest of the Israel Zion Coptic Church (IZCC). The IZCC has about 200 or 250 members. The IZCC is an offshoot of the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church, commonly known as the Rastafarians.
The IZCC uses marijuana as a sacrament. The purpose of using the marijuana is to make the users aware of their sins. Typically, marijuana would be used approximately three times a day.
Defendant had grown marijuana for use in the IZCC, but had been criminally prosecuted and convicted for it. (See
State
v.
Peck
(1988)
The court, sitting without a jury, found defendant guilty of transportation of and possession for sale of marijuana. Although it found that a principal tenet of defendant’s religion was the use of marijuana, it concluded the specific conduct for which defendant was convicted was incidental to, not an integral part of, the practice of his religious beliefs. The court sentenced defendant to five years’ probation, conditioned on two hundred forty days in custody.
*357 II
Discussion
A. Sufficiency of Evidence of Intent to Sell
Possession of illegal drugs for sale requires that the defendant have the intent to sell the drugs.
(In re Christopher B.
(1990)
Defendant argues the evidence of intent to sell was insufficient, despite the officer’s opinion, because defendant testified without contradiction he intended only to give the marijuana away, not to sell it. We find the evidence sufficient, for at least two reasons. First, defendant testified that when he provided marijuana for use in the church, members were “free and welcomed to put some money in” towards the cost of the marijuana, and that they did so from time to time. A sale of an illegal drug is “a transfer of possession of such a drug to another for cash.”
(People
v.
Daniels, supra,
Second, a “sale” of drugs “includes transfers other than for money.”
(People
v.
Lazenby
(1992)
B. Free Exercise of Religion
Defendant contends his conviction is invalid because the prosecution failed to show the laws he violated were supported by a compelling state *358 interest. He characterizes his claim as one arising under the “free exercise” clause of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. 1
In
Employment Division
v.
Smith
(1990)
In reaction to Employment Division v. Smith, Congress enacted the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA). (42 U.S.C. § 2000bb et seq.) RFRA provides that government, including a state, “shall not substantially burden a person’s exercise of religion even if the burden results from a rule of general applicability,” unless application of the law is the “least restrictive means” of furthering a “compelling governmental interest.” (42 U.S.C. § 2000bb-1(a), (b).) RFRA further provides that “[a] person whose religious exercise has been burdened in violation of this section may assert that violation as a claim or defense in a judicial proceeding and obtain appropriate relief against a government.” (42 U.S.C. § 2000bb-l(c).)
RFRA “does not present itself as an interpretation of the Constitution overruling
[Employment Division
v.]
Smith,
rather it consists of a command that must be followed as a matter of federal law.”
(U.S.
v.
Bauer
(9th Cir. 1996)
The California Supreme Court considered RFRA at length in
Smith
v.
Fair Employment & Housing Com., supra,
Although
Smith
v.
Fair Employment & Housing Com., supra,
This point was made clear in
U.S.
v.
Bauer, supra,
Here, defendant obtained marijuana not only for personal use but also for distribution to at least two other church members, i.e., those who contributed the rest of the money. He also made a practice of providing marijuana to nonmembers of the church. There was no indication that defendant’s own practice of his religion required him to obtain marijuana for distribution to others, especially those who were not even church members.
For this reason,
People
v.
Woody
(1964)
Second, defendant traveled to California and violated its laws because he could obtain a large quantity of marijuana less expensively by doing so. Thus, the “burden” created by the laws prohibiting defendant’s conduct was that defendant might have to pay more to purchase smaller amounts. As the plurality opinion in
Smith
v.
Fair Employment & Housing Com., supra,
stated, “[a]n economic cost, however, does not equate to a substantial burden for purposes of the free exercise clause.” (
Finally, exempting defendant from the laws he violated would impair the interests of third parties—here, the citizens of California. Permitting defendant to purchase large quantities of marijuana in California would interfere substantially with the state’s efforts to control trafficking in illegal drugs by, among other things, encouraging others to cultivate or import marijuana for sale to defendant and his fellow church members.
For these reasons, we conclude the laws under which defendant was prosecuted did not substantially burden his exercise of religion, and were not required to be supported by a compelling state interest.
4
As the plurality opinion in
Smith
v.
Fair Employment & Housing Com.
emphasized, requiring a compelling state interest where there is no
substantial
burden on the exercise of religion “would turn on its head the ordinary assumption that legislation on economic and social matters need only have a rational basis.” Except where the state could show a compelling interest, “[e]ach person would unilaterally decide . . . which laws to obey and which to ignore,” based on his or her own professed religious beliefs. (
C. Probation Terms
As terms of probation, the court required that defendant violate no law or ordinance, not possess or use any controlled substance unless medically prescribed, and not associate with known possessors, users or traffickers of controlled substances who were unrelated to him. The court also required defendant to submit to drug testing. Defendant contends the requirements that he not use or possess a controlled substance, and that he submit to drug testing, impermissibly burden his free exercise of his religion. *362 He contends the requirement that he not associate with drug users impermissibly burdens his freedom of association. 5
1. Possession or use
A sentencing court has “broad discretion” to determine what conditions should be imposed in granting probation.
(People
v.
Welch, supra,
The requirements that defendant not use or possess a controlled substance, and that he submit to drug testing, are reasonably related to his offenses and to future criminality. Defendant’s offenses were motivated, in part, by his desire to obtain and use marijuana. Permitting defendant to continue to possess and use marijuana likely would lead him to engage in future criminal behavior. Indeed, possession of marijuana, even for personal use, is itself a criminal offense. (Health & Saf. Code, § 11357.)
Defendant argues that because the use of marijuana is central to the practice of his religion, the condition that he not possess or use it infringes a constitutional right and must be supported by a compelling state interest. Because probation is a privilege and not a right
(In re York
(1995)
The record here adequately demonstrates the condition prohibiting possession or use is necessary to serve public safety. Defendant testified he typically smokes marijuana several times every day, usually in the morning, *363 at noon, and in the evening. After smoking in the morning, defendant sometimes drives his truck on the highways to his fencing jobs, pulling a 16-foot trailer. While working at a jobsite, defendant often drives somewhere else to smoke and then drives back to the job. Defendant also operates motorized equipment at jobsites when he has been smoking. Defendant estimated he had driven within one-half hour after smoking on more than one hundred occasions.
The prosecution’s expert testified that marijuana impairs driving. Defendant’s expert, a medical doctor and professor of pharmacology, agreed. He stated marijuana decreases motor abilities in many people, causing difficulty in depth perception and an altered sense of timing which are particularly hazardous during driving. His opinion was that individuals who ingest marijuana and become intoxicated “shouldn’t drive cars.” He also said that members of the IZCC consume marijuana to bring about “some effect” rather than merely using it ceremonially, as Communion wine is used in the Catholic church.
The court reasonably could conclude from this record that if defendant were not required to refrain from using marijuana while on probation, he would continue to drive and operate power equipment while under “some effect” from using it. That conclusion adequately supported the court’s imposition of the condition. A more specific condition—e.g., that defendant not drive or operate equipment while under the influence of marijuana— would not be effective because, as is evident from the record, defendant does not consider himself impaired when he does so, despite the unanimous opinion of the experts at trial.
2. Freedom of association
“[Restriction of the right of association is part of the nature of the criminal process.”
(People
v.
Robinson
(1988)
*364 The condition the court imposed on defendant was narrower, applying only to users unrelated to him. The condition was supported by the state’s compelling interest in preventing distribution of controlled substances. Defendant testified that “hundreds of times” he had shared marijuana with people who were not church members. Approximately 50 times, he had shared marijuana with a nonmember he met the same day.
It is a criminal offense to distribute marijuana, whether or not for profit. (Health & Saf. Code, § 11360.) The elimination of traffic in illegal drugs is a compelling state interest.
(People
v.
Superior Court
(Clements) (1988)
The state also has a compelling interest in preventing distribution of illegal drugs to minors. (See
Music Plus Four, Inc.
v.
Barnet
(1980)
Ill
Disposition
The judgment is affirmed.
Hollenhorst, Acting P. J., and McDaniel, J., * concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied March 26, 1997.
Notes
Defendant does not assert a claim under the parallel provision of article I, section 4 of the California Constitution.
The plurality opinion authored by Justice Werdegar was joined by Justices George and Arabian. Justice Mosk reached the same result but considered it unnecessary to decide whether the owner had a meritorious defense under RFRA, because he concluded RFRA was unconstitutional.
(Smith
v.
Fair Employment & Housing Com., supra,
After
Woody
was decided, the Native American Church obtained from the federal government an exemption allowing the religious use of peyote. (See 21 C.F.R. § 1307.31 (1996).) The Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church sought such an exemption for marijuana but was unsuccessful. (See
Olsen
v.
Drug Enforcement Admin.
(D.C. Cir. 1989)
We note that even where the challenged law directly interferes with the use of marijuana for religious purposes—as, for example, by prohibiting simple possession or use—courts repeatedly have found a compelling governmental interest to support the law. (See, e.g.,
Whyte
v.
United States
(D.C. App. 1984)
The Attorney General argues, under
People
v.
Welch
(1993)
Retired Associate Justice of the Court of Appeal, Fourth District, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
