Pubdate: Thu, 23 Sep 1999 Source: Times-News, The (ID) Copyright: 1999 Magic Valley Newspapers Contact: P.O. Box 548, Twin Falls, ID 83303 Fax: (208) 734-553 Feedback: http://www.magicvalley.com/submit.html Website: http://www.magicvalley.com/ Author: Brian Haynes, Times-News WOMAN FIGHTS WITH MEDICAL MARIJUANA DEFENSE TWIN FALLS -- Prosecutors say Kathy Tadlock was selling marijuana, a charge Tadlock is fighting with the rarely-used medical marijuana defense. "We all agree that Kathy Tadlock had marijuana in her home," Public Defender John Hansen said Wednesday during the trial's opening arguments. "What we don't agree on is what she had it for." Hansen hopes to show the jury that Tadlock uses marijuana to alleviate chronic pain, but whether the jury will be allowed to consider that defense depends on District Judge Nathan Higer, who will decide whether to allow the common-law necessity defense once testimony is finished. If Higer allows the defense, it would be the second such case in Twin Falls County. The first was in 1996 when Steven Samora tried to convince a jury that the marijuana he grew at his Murtaugh home was used to treat chronic back pain. The jury didn't believe him and convicted him of trafficking marijuana. Samora was sentenced to five to seven years in prison. The medical necessity defense has been legal in Idaho since 1990, when the Idaho State Supreme Court ruled that it could be used to defend charges of marijuana possession. The case, State vs. Hastings, dealt with an arthritic woman in Coeur d'Alene who used marijuana to alleviate her pain. Tadlock, who suffers from chronic pain, insisted on taking the case to trial and using the medical defense, Hansen said after the first day of trial Wednesday. The prosecution is trying to prove that Tadlock sold marijuana from her Twin Falls home. Tadlock is charged with possession of marijuana with intent to deliver. The prosecution is building its case around items found in Tadlock's bedroom during a January police search. During the search, police found more than a half pound of what appeared to be marijuana, scales, $5,000 in cash and a notebook with weights and prices scribbled inside, Twin Falls police detective Anthony Barnhart testified. About a month before the search a former roommate of Tadlock's, Mark Kennedy, told police that Tadlock was selling marijuana from her Twin Falls home, Kennedy testified. But that was a lie he made up because he was mad at Tadlock and wanted revenge, he said at trial. The case will continue at 9 a.m today. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake