Pubdate: Tue, 14 Apr 1998 Source: Sacramento Bee (CA) Contact: http://www.sacbee.com/ Author: Linda Deutsch - AP Special Correspondent POT ACTIVIST RELEASED FROM PRISON LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Medical marijuana activist Todd McCormick was ordered freed from prison today but told he could return there if he is found to be using the drug. "If you are playing any games or trying to skirt anything, you will pay the price for it," U.S. District Judge George H. King warned. "Have I made myself clear to you?" "Very clear," McCormick replied. King ordered McCormick released from prison until an April 22 court hearing. He said McCormick will be tested periodically by federal authorities to ensure he is not using marijuana. McCormick, 27, is charged with growing marijuana. He and four other people were arrested on July 29 after authorities raided his rented Bel-Air mansion and found 4,116 marijuana plants. He pleaded innocent Nov. 10 and was free on $500,000 bail posted by actor and fellow marijuana activist Woody Harrelson. Part of McCormick's bail condition was that he not use marijuana. McCormick was ordered to jail on April 3 for violating that bail after he failed three drug tests in the past month. McCormick claims the results were skewed because he was taking Marinol, a legal drug containing a synthetic form of marijuana. Under the conditions set by the judge, McCormick will not be able to take that drug, said his lawyer, Eric Shevin. McCormick says marijuana helps ease the pain of a rare form of cancer he has suffered since childhood. He also suffers pain from hip and back problems. "He's not a marijuana addict, he's a cancer patient," Shevin said outside court after the hearing. About 20 supporters, including McCormick's mother and girlfriend crowded the courtroom and later gathered outside. Some carried signs, including one that read: "Stop Arresting Sick People." McCormick maintains that he hasn't done anything illegal under Proposition 215, passed by California voters in November 1996, which legalized the cultivation, use and possession of marijuana for medicinal purposes on a doctor's recommendation. Federal courts have not recognized the state law.