Pubdate: Sun, 20 June 1999 Source: Santa Monica Our Times (CA) Copyright: 1999 Times Community Newspapers Contact: http://www.ourtimes.com/home/ourtimes/santamonica/ Author: Gina Piccalo June 20, 1999 JUDGE: ACTIVIST CAN'T PROMOTE POT Venice Man With Doctor's Permission To Smoke Marijuana Convicted Of Illegal Cultivation. VENICE -- Joe "Hemp" Kidwell, a marijuana activist convicted for illegally cultivating the plant, has been ordered to stop promoting pot or face two years in prison - a sacrifice he's willing to make to test new marijuana laws. Kidwell, 45, was sentenced Tuesday for illegally cultivating 14 marijuana plants at his Lincoln Boulevard office. He was arrested Aug. 10 after a Los Angeles police officer noticed the plants at his business. Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Albert Matthews has banned Kidwell from promoting marijuana as a condition of his probation and has restricted him from using marijuana anywhere but in his own home. The order also prevents him from speaking to the media or speaking publicly on the subject of marijuana use. Before his conviction, Kidwell, 45, operated First Hemp Bank Distribution Network, a buyer's club based in Venice for people who use marijuana as prescribed by a physician. The judge has also ordered him to stop operation of that business. During his May trial, orthopedic physician Dr. Fred Hakmet testified that he recommended Kidwell use marijuana for his arthritis and chronic back pain. Since Jan. 1, 1997, state law has permitted the use and cultivation of marijuana for medical purposes with a physician's verbal or written recommendation. "As soon as the law was enacted, we started to test the law," said Ron Richards, one of Kidwell's attorneys. Kidwell has one prior misdemeanor conviction for offering an undercover police officer marijuana in March 1998. Santa Monica police arrested him May 2 for possession of marijuana after someone reported that he was smoking pot on the Third Street Promenade. Police reports show that officers found no marijuana on him. A preliminary hearing on that case is scheduled June 29. Richards has filed an appeal on the most recent case stating that Kidwell's First Amendment rights are being violated by the judge's order and that the jury misunderstood the law. "This was an illegal conviction," Richards said. "A medical patient with a written doctor's recommendation is exempt from the ... laws that he was charged under. He has four written doctor recommendations and two [doctors] who testified on his behalf." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake