Pubdate: Sun, 30 Sep 2001 Source: Spokesman-Review (WA) Copyright: 2001 The Spokesman-Review Contact: http://www.spokesmanreview.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/417 Author: Associated Press HEMP BOOSTER PREPARING TO MAKE RUN FOR THE BORDER HARRISBURG, Ore. The organizer of the annual World Hemp Festival is tying up loose ends in preparing to leave the country. "I'm running for the border now," marijuana activist Bill Conde told The (Eugene) Register-Guard. Monday will be the final day in business for Conde's Redwood Lumber, which has doubled in recent summers as home base for the three-day World Hemp Festival. Conde will auction off various items remaining at his business from lumber to tools and even a forklift on Oct. 13. He said he plans to move to the Central American country of Belize, where his wife and three children already are waiting. Conde faces six criminal charges related to allegations of drug use at his hemp festivals. He said he has been negotiating with the Linn County district attorney's office to resolve the charges so he can legally leave the country. In June, Conde served a two-week sentence after being convicted on felony charges of abetting delivery of a controlled substance and hindering prosecution. Conde, 58, now says he's ready to retire to his wife's native country, and he won't miss the close scrutiny that his advocacy of marijuana brought him. He also said the national events of the past month have prompted changes that reinforced his decision to move on. "In all honesty, man, I'd be scared to stay in this country now," Conde said. "I'm a dove, not a hawk. Right now in the United States of America, it's really not good flying weather for the doves." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth