Pubdate: 2 Oct 1997 Source: TribuneHerald, Hawaii Contact: FAX: (808) 9699100 Phone: (808) 9356621 Hemp seeds in spotlight again during trial of pot advocate Officer grew pot plants as means of gathering evidence By Crystal Kua TribuneHerald Products containing hemp seeds have been sold in stores locally, a police officer told a Circuit Court jury Wednesday. Officer Dennis De Morales testified in the trial of marijuana advocate Aaron Anderson, who is charged with seconddegree commercial promotion of marijuana. The charge, a felony, stems from a 25pound shipment of hemp seeds Anderson, 60, ordered from a mainland seed company in 1991 Police intercepted the package and then questioned Anderson 'when he :went to the Federal Express office In Hilo to pick up the parcel on May 9 1991. Anderson wasn't arrested at the scene: because' police considered the situation "lowrisk"." Anderson contends that the seeds he ordered. were supposed to be sterile De Morales, however, testified that in order to test Anderson's claim, De Morales grew marijuana plants 8 inches to a foot tall from the seeds. De Morales, the chief investigator in the case,' testified that the first batch he tried to grow, which consisted of 423 seeds, died. He said the reason the plants died was because they were burned by being over fertilized, an answer which the judge didn't allow to stand. A second batch of 59 seeds produced the plants that De Morales eventually kept as evidence. During crossexamination, De Morales acknowledged he has seen in local stores products with labels that say the products contain hemp seeds. He said the stores are generally feed stores such as the Miranda Country store. De Morales also agreed with defense lawyer Brian De Lima that police are not qualified to tell the difference between marijuana and hemp seeds. The defense argues that Anderson also knew that retail outlets locally sold products which contain hemp, but he opted to buy directly from a mainland supplier to avoid the middle man. De Lima also hammered away at inconsistencies in De Morales' police report and previous court testimony. For example, De Morales said he took a portion of the seeds from the original parcel and put it in another smaller bag just in case something happened to the original parcel. De Morales said the larger package was used in a controlled delivery to Anderson while the smaller package, which Anderson never handled, was kept in a locker at the police station. De Morales testified Wednesday that Anderson "had the parcel in his hand" when De Morales stopped him outside the Federal Express office. De Morales also testified that it was the larger package that was delivered to Anderson in the controlled situation. But De Lima pointed out that De Morales did not mention in his police report that Anderson took possession of the parcel, and the report even said that the parcel was in De Morales' custody at the time Anderson was questioned. De Lima also showed De Morales a transcript of the police officer's testimony in a 1995 proceeding in the case. In that transcript, De Morales testified it was the smaller—not large package which was used in the controlled delivery. "It was a mistake," De Morales said of the 1995 testimony. The defense has argued Anderson never took possession of the package. Trial continues today be Circuit Judge Greg Nakamura