Seattle (AP) — San Francisco Giants pitcher Tim Lincecum is facing
misdemeanor marijuana charges following a traffic stop in his home
state.
Washington State Patrol spokesman Steve Schatzel said Thursday
that the 2008 Cy Young Award winner and former University of Washington
star was pulled over for speeding on Interstate 5 in the town of Hazel
Dell, about four miles north of the Oregon border, on Oct. 30.
An
officer approached Lincecum's 2006 Mercedes and smelled marijuana as
the pitcher rolled down his window. Schatzel said Lincecum immediately
complied with a request to hand over the drug and a marijuana pipe from
the car's center console.
The amount measured was 3.3 grams.
Schatzel said police consider that a small amount for personal use,
well below the maximum of 40 grams before possession is classified
differently and carries a more severe penalty.
The incident was first reported by The Columbian in Vancouver, Wash.
"It's
not really out of the ordinary. It happens every day," Schatzel said of
the volume of marijuana Lincecum handed over. "It was about the size of
a thumb, the whole thumb."
Lincecum could face potential fines
totaling $622 for the misdemeanor possession of marijuana and drug
paraphernalia counts plus the citation for driving 74 mph in a 60 mph
zone, Schatzel said.
The 25-year-old All-Star starter entered a
plea of not guilty through his attorney on Monday, according to records
in Clark County District Court. A hearing that had been scheduled for
Friday morning was canceled, pending a pretrial conference between
Lincecum's attorney and a county prosecutor on Nov. 23.
Lincecum is currently scheduled to appear before a judge on Dec. 22.
The Giants said they were aware of the situation but did not immediately have a comment.
The
native of the Seattle suburb of Bellevue went 15-7 with a 2.48 ERA in
32 starts and 225 1-3 innings in 2009, his third season in the major
leagues. He is 40-17 with a 2.90 ERA in his career, and could be
getting a multimillion-dollar raise from salary arbitration this
offseason.
Teammates consider the smallish right-hander a quirky
perfectionist. They also consider him the "Franchise," the nickname
they gave him when he broke into the big leagues only a year out of
college. Others see his boyish face, shaggy dark hair, his diminutive
frame — and his dominance — and call him "The Freak."
San
Francisco chose him 10th overall in the 2006 draft out of Washington,
and he instantly became the organization's top pitching prospect since
Hall of Famer Juan Marichal signed with the New York Giants as an
amateur free agent in 1957.