Pubdate: August 28 1997 Hemp product sales bring bust in Hoover By Steve Joynt Birmingham Post Herald Angela Guilford said she thought the items she was selling in her small Hoover shop were perfectly legal. After all, plenty of other places were selling them. Now though, Ms. Guilford and her husband Jeff Russell are charged with trafficking in marijuana, all because she sold jewelry, seeds, hats, and other hemp items. And the case has quickly become a focus of dealers in industrial hemp across the nation. ôThey are pretending that this is a legitimate police action.ö Ms. Guilford said from her store, Bohemian Rhapsody, in the Hoover Square shopping center next to the theater. ôbut weÆve heard that some people donÆt want our store here, and thatÆs why this is happening.ö Because the store carries common herbs for smoking as well as tshirts with drug slogans, ôThey think it looks like a head shop. But I donÆt smoke or use drugs, and we donÆt sell drugÆs.ö Hoover Police Lt. Paul Bonnecarere said the case against Ms. Guilford is the result of nothing more than police officers doing there job. When it was pointed out that Ms. GuilfordÆs exhusband is a Hoover police officer, Bonnecarere said, ôThat has absolutely no bearing on the situation.ö He said he didnÆt know how his investigators were first alerted to the storeÆs inventory. ôOne of our officers went into the store and bought a onepound bag of hemp seeds,ö he said. ôFrom that, we were able to get a search warrant.ö The seeds, Ms. Guilford said, were sterile and incapable of producing plants. They were sold as birdseed. On June 24, nine police officers came into the store with a search warrant and seized all of the hemp products. On July 2, Ms. Guilford and Russell were arrested. Russell said that while he knew what kind of items his wife sold in the store, his only connection was to keep the books for her and put the checking account in his name. While federal law does not allow the growing of marijuana for itÆs hemp, the use of hemp in industrial products is not against the law. State law is a different matter. Said Jefferson County District Attorney David Barber. ôUnder the stateÆs trafficking statute, marijuana is defined as any part of the plant under the genus cannabis. That means anything that can be identified as coming from the plant.ö While Barber would not talk about the specific case, he pointed out that the legislature, not he, wrote the law. When asked if he could exercise discretion in how those laws are enforced, Barber replied, ôCertain levels of discretion, sure.ö When it was pointed out that some states did not define marijuana in the same way or did not enforce the law to the point of arresting dealers of hemp clothing and jewelry, Barber said, ôSome areas are a little looser about marijuana, and weÆre not.ö He also said he thought the legislature probably knew that products not meant for human consumption were made from hemp when it passed the law. State Sen. Roger Bedford, DRussellville, laughed when he was told about the pending Hoover case and asked, ôMade out of marijuana plants? I didnÆt know you could do that.ö Meanwhile, some area businesses that carried hemp products have reacted to the news of the Hoover arrests, while others are doing business as usual. The World Winds store in the Riverchase Galleria used to sell products made from hemp. But the district manager Angie Lake said Wednesday, ôWe donÆt have any hemp items anymore.ö On the Southside, the Golden Temple still offers hemp seeds for sale. ôThey are roasted, so they wonÆt grow.ö manager Laura Phelps said. ôWe werenÆt really aware that was any kind of violation of the law.ö Ralph Bolen, attorney for Ms. Guilford and Russell, said he has a container of mixed seeds for parrots that was purchased at a local WalMart. Tenth on the list of ingredients, he said, is the hemp seed. There is rope made from hemp for sale all over the state, Bolen said, ôthereÆs even hemp in the dashboards of some Mercedes cars. The use of hemp is pervasive in our society.ö So pervasive, Ms. Guilford said, that when she went to a book signing at a Hoover store recently and saw an offduty police officer working security for the event, ôWhat do you think I saw around his neck? A necklace made from hemp.ö Steve Joynt can be reached at 2053252428 or Reprinted from the Birmingham Post Herald newspaper Thursday August 28th 1997 Birmingham, Alabama USA