Pubdate: Wed, 22 Apr 2009
Source: Red and Black, The (U of Georgia, GA Edu)
Copyright: 2009 The Red and Black Publishing Co., Inc.
Contact:  http://www.redandblack.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2800
Author: Carey O'Neil
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?420 (Cannabis - Popular)
Cited: GA NORML at UGA  www.uga.edu/norml

UP IN SMOKE: NORML OUTRAGED, FACES TWO YEARS OF PROBATION

A University marijuana advocacy group's high hopes were snuffed out 
at a hearing Tuesday.

At a continuation of the National Organization for the Reform of 
Marijuana Laws' University Judiciary hearing, NORML was found to have 
improperly used an image of the University's arch and failed to 
follow the instructions of University officials. The Judiciary panel 
put NORML on probation for two years and required the group to write 
an action plan ensuring violations do not occur again.

Wojciech Kaczkowski, a junior from Krakow, Poland, and NORML's 
president, said he was outraged by the decision.

"I just wasted my whole semester just to get something that was 
pretty much predetermined," he exclaimed after the hearing.

Members of the University Judiciary panel said they were unable to 
talk to The Red & Black until five days after the hearing, in case 
NORML decides to appeal.

Kaczkowski called the hearing a "mock trial" and pledged to appeal 
the decision.

"We're going to fight this as long as it takes," he said. "This is 
too harsh of a penalty for something like this."

For the appeal, the University chapter of the national organization 
hopes to gain backing from NORML's headquarters in Washington, D.C., 
and the American Civil Liberties Union.

Before entering the judicial process, Kaczkowski said NORML was 
offered a plea bargain to agree the group was in violation of 
University policy and accept one year of probation.

"We're being singled out," he said. "Because we fought for these 
things, our penalty is even harsher."

Kaczkowski appeared confident before the verdict.

"When I was sitting at home listening to my iPod, Bob Marley came on, 
'No Woman No Cry' - so everything is gonna be alright."

In his closing statement to the panel, Kaczkowski said that too harsh 
a sanction "would be ludicrous and controversial," and he hoped the 
conflict would be resolved "in a way that will satisfy both sides."

NORML argued the image of a bulldog smoking a joint on the steps of 
the arch - which appeared on the organization's Web site and 
fundraiser T-shirts - was the intellectual property of the artist.

"The image may be a parody, but it's not an infringement of the 
trademark of the University," Kaczkowski said in his closing statement.

Douglas Hennenfent, opinion writer for the panel, said he disagreed.

"The image of the arch used is a violation," he said in the panel's verdict.

Kaczkowski said he holds little hope for his appeal.

"If it we appealed to the University administration, I know we 
wouldn't get anything done," he said.

Still, Kaczkowski said he felt it important for NORML to appeal the 
decision as a matter of principle.

If NORML is found in violation of another University policy during 
the two years of its probation, the group faces suspension as a 
University organization.

Waites Laseter, vice president of NORML, said, "If they kicked us off 
campus, it wouldn't really do anything." He explained that because 
NORML is a national organization, the University chapter would simply 
change to the Athens chapter.

Kaczkowski said now that the hearing is over, NORML will focus more 
on petitioning to put a proposition to decriminalize holding less 
than seven grams of marijuana on Athens' ballot in 2010. Since the 
petition was started on April 20 last year, Kaczkowski said the 
organization has reached between 2,500 to 3,000 of the 6,000 
necessary signatures.

"We're definitely picking up speed with that," he said. 
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom