Pubdate: Thu, 24 Aug 2000
Source: Associated Press
Copyright: 2000 The Associated Press
Author: Steve Bailey

HARRELSON ACQUITTED OF DRUG CHARGE

BEATTYVILLE, Ky. (AP) - A jury acquitted actor Woody Harrelson of 
misdemeanor marijuana possession charges Thursday, ending his four-year 
court battle to get the state to differentiate between hemp and marijuana.

Harrelson planted four hemp seeds in 1996, knowing he would be arrested, so 
he could challenge a law outlawing possession of any part of the cannabis 
plant. The jurors deliberated about 25 minutes before finding him innocent.

``Regardless of what the Supreme Court says and regardless of what the 
legislators say, those people don't think it's right that someone should go 
to jail for growing industrial hemp,'' Harrelson said.

The Kentucky Supreme Court cleared the way for a trial when it ruled in 
March that there is no difference between the narcotic marijuana and its 
botanical cousin, hemp, which contains only minute amounts of the substance 
that makes marijuana smokers high, tetrahydrocannabinol or THC.

Lee County Attorney Tom Jones asked the jury to fine Harrelson the maximum 
$500 and give him at least 30 days in the county jail because the actor 
misused his fame to break the law.

``He could have come here and talked about school violence or domestic 
violence and tried to bring attention to those problems. Instead, he came 
here and broke a drug law,'' Jones said.

Harrelson, who starred in ``Natural Born Killers,'' ``The People vs. Larry 
Flynt'' and the TV series ``Cheers,'' is a longtime environmental activist. 
He has invested in a hemp clothing company and argues that if paper 
manufacturers used hemp, there would be no need to cut down so many trees.

Hemp was once one of Kentucky's leading crops. In the 1800s it was used to 
make rope and sails, but anti-drug laws, the availability of other fibers 
and the Marijuana Tax Act of 1937 wiped out most legal production of hemp 
in the United States. 
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