Pubdate: Mon, 27 Apr 1998
Source: KNBC - MSNBC affiliate in Los Angeles
Contact:  http://www.msnbc.com/local/KNBC/default.asp 

JUDGE DELAYS MCCORMICK MARIJUANA DECISION

LOS ANGELES, April 27 - A federal judge said Monday he will allow a medical
marijuana advocate to use synthetic pot substances if prosecutors cannot
prove he is using the legal prescription to mask marijuana use.

"I am not a doctor and I do not intend to second-guess the actions of a
licensed physician," U.S. District Judge George H. King said at the hearing
for 27-year-old Todd McCormick. "But if the facts show that the defendant
was using this prescription to cover up his illegal activity, then I must
tell you I don't see where there is a constitutional right to a particular
type of medication," he told McCormick's lawyer, David Michael.

On other requests McCormick had Monday, the judge was less equivocal.
Michael had asked King to reconsider a ruling by a magistrate, denying a
request to stop testing McCormick for drugs while he awaits trial. That
effectively would have allowed the defendant to smoke pot while on bail. "To
the extent that you are asking the court to sanction his use of marijuana,
that request is unequivocally denied," King told Michael. Without giving the
reasons for his decision, the judge also refused to reduce the $500,000 bail
that actor and hemp activist Woody Harrelson posted for McCormick.

The defendant is awaiting trial on one count of "manufacturing" marijuana
for growing 4,116 marijuana plants at his rented Bel-Air mansion. King said
Monday the trial probably will be sometime this fall. McCormick claims he
has the right to grow pot under Proposition 215, the medical marijuana
initiative California voters approved in 1996. If convicted, he faces a
minimum 10-year sentence.

A provision of his bail is that McCormick refrain from marijuana use, which
he says he has smoked since childhood to treat the pain brought on by 10
bouts of histiocytosis-X, a rare form of cancer.

On March 17, U.S. Magistrate Judge James McMahon ordered McCormick to stop
using Marinol, which was prescribed by his doctor, and hemp seed oil. He
accused the defendant of taking those substances to mask marijuana use.

On April 3, the magistrate ordered McCormick locked up for testing positive
for marijuana seven times between March 7 and 18. Twelve days later,

King overruled McMahon and freed McCormick pending a May 6 hearing. King
told the lawyers today "that he wants "a full record of the facts" about
whether McCormick used the legal substances to mask pot smoking, and added
"there is some evidence that he has."

The judge may have given a big hint today about whether he will allow
McCormick's lawyers to use Proposition 215 as a defense at trial.

Told that lawyers for both sides expect the trial to go about two to three
weeks, King replied: "Why would it possibly take two to three weeks to try
this case?"

King said he would hold a hearing later in the year to talk about the issues
to be presented at trial.

Under federal law, marijuana is illegal, even for medical use. McCormick's
lawyers claim he is being tried in federal court to skirt the state ballot
initiative.