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News (Media Awareness Project) - US HI: Man Granted Trial In Hemp Birdseed Case
Title:US HI: Man Granted Trial In Hemp Birdseed Case
Published On:1999-06-06
Source:Honolulu Star-Bulletin (HI)
Fetched On:2008-09-06 04:37:54
MAN GRANTED TRIAL IN HEMP BIRDSEED CASE

HILO -- A Big Island hemp and marijuana advocate who was prosecuted for
buying sterilized hemp birdseed must receive a trial for his lawsuit
claiming his civil rights were violated, a federal appeals court has ruled.

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco ruled Tuesday that
the lawsuit by Aaron Anderson will be sent back to federal court in
Honolulu.

It overturned an earlier ruling against Anderson by U.S. District Judge
David Ezra.

The appeals court said a jury may find Anderson's rights were violated, and
Big Island prosecutor Jay Kimura may be responsible.

Kimura responded that the prosecution which prompted Anderson's lawsuit was
proper. He said the county should appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

In 1991, Anderson ordered 25 pounds of sterilized hemp birdseed from North
Dakota. A later U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration affidavit said the seed
was legally imported from China.

County police intercepted the shipment to Anderson at the Hawaiian Hemp
Council, where Roger Christie was also a member. Charges of marijuana
possession against the two followed, although deputy prosecutor Kay Iopa
dropped the charge against Christie in 1995.

Anderson was tried, but a mistrial was declared when the jury deadlocked.

Also in 1995, Anderson and Christie sued Iopa, Kimura and the county.

They said Iopa and Kimura selectively and therefore illegally prosecuted
them, and were trying to stifle their right to free speech. They cited a
1992 statement made in court by Iopa.

"As a practical matter, no, we're not going to go out, bust the little old
lady that's got a bag of bird seeds ... " Iopa told a judge. "When you get
25 pounds ... going to, um, a hemp grower, that is very vocally, very
outwardly advocating the legalization of marijuana."

Iopa gave no evidence that Anderson or Christie grow marijuana. In its
ruling, the appeals court said a jury might conclude Iopa violated the men's
rights, but Iopa didn't have final authority over the case. The final
authority was with Kimura, it said.

Anderson's and Christie's lawsuit put Kimura on notice there might be a
violation of rights. A jury may find Kimura deliberately allowed the
violation, the court said.

Christie is excluded from the suit because the charge against him was
dropped, it said. Anderson's attorney, Steven Strauss, said he hopes the
case can be tried before Ezra in six months.

That would be blocked if the county appeals to the U.S. Supreme Court.
County attorney Steven Christensen said it's too soon to know if the county
will do that.
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