Pubdate: Thu, 11 Jul 2002 Source: Denver Post (CO) Webpage: www.denverpost.com/Stories/0,1413,36%257E53%257E723717,00.html Copyright: 2002 The Denver Post Corp Contact: http://www.denverpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122 Author: Mike Soraghan ACTIVIST GELT PLEADS GUILTY TO POT CHARGE WASHINGTON - Ben Gelt, who ran a gun-control campaign all the way to the White House, found himself in a less illustrious landmark in the nation's capital Wednesday as he pleaded guilty to possession of marijuana. Gelt, 21, son of Denver Councilwoman Susan Barnes-Gelt and former Colorado Democratic chairman Howard Gelt, stood in District of Columbia Superior Court to plead guilty to possession of 16.8 grams of marijuana in his dorm room at American University. Gelt will serve no jail time and a drug-trafficking charge was dismissed in exchange for his plea. He will serve six months of unsupervised probation in Colorado, at the end of which he can have his record wiped clean. He also was ordered to pay $150 into a crime victims' fund. He was accompanied to court by Barnes-Gelt. "I'd like to apologize for this humongous mistake," Gelt told District of Columbia Superior Court Judge Mildred Edwards. "I'm wanting to not be around any illegal activity again in my life." Gelt, now enrolled at the University of Colorado, got some high- powered support from U.S. Rep. Mark Udall, a Boulder Democrat, who wrote to the judge about Gelt's political activism. Gelt was inspired by the 1999 Columbine High School massacre to become a student leader in Colorado's gun-control movement. Gelt and a friend organized nearly 100 Colorado students to travel to Washington, where they lobbied Congress and had a private meeting with then-President Clinton. "As Ben faces his own difficult time in life, I hope you will consider the contributions this young man has made - and most importantly - what those contributions say about his character and spirit," Udall wrote. But Gelt got a lecture from the judge about hypocrisy in fighting to stop gun violence while smoking marijuana, which she said fuels gun crime in the streets. She said marijuana is at the root of more gun crimes in Washington than cocaine or heroin. "You can't have a double standard about this anymore," Edwards said. "People are dead in the District of Columbia because of marijuana." Gelt said after the hearing he was surprised by that. "There's not a lot of street crime around American University, so it's hard for someone from my socioeconomic background to realize that," he said. Gelt was arrested as part of a sting operation at the private university. Prosecutors said Washington police served a search warrant on his room Feb. 21 and found three bags of marijuana in his desk after he told them where to look. Prosecutor Tony Quinn, citing Gelt's political work, questioned whether he was getting special treatment in being allowed to serve probation without orders to check in with a probation officer. But Edwards said she was giving Gelt the same second chance she would give any first-time offender. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth