More than 1,850 people have signed a petition asking prosecutors to dismiss the charges against three men who were arrested after crossing into Idaho with what they say were truckloads of hemp.

BOISE, Idaho — More than 1,850 people have signed a petition asking prosecutors to dismiss the charges against three truck drivers who were arrested after crossing into Idaho with what they said were truckloads of hemp.

"Hemp has been legalized at the federal level and is legal in nearly every other state," organizers wrote in the Change.org petition. "We do not want our tax dollars spent prosecuting or incarcerating these individuals, and we do not feel their future employment prospects should be clouded with a criminal record on account of their work transporting hemp."

The men referenced in the petition, Andrew D’Addario, Erich Eisenhart, and Denis Palamarchuk, were all charged under Idaho's marijuana trafficking statute.

Like marijuana, hemp comes from the cannabis plant, but contains very low levels of THC and is grown primarily for its use as fiber. Hemp was federally reclassified from a Schedule I drug to an agricultural product in December 2018.

Idaho law, however, in written in such a way that any part of a cannabis plant with any detectable amount of THC - no matter how minuscule - is considered marijuana and prosecuted according to drug statutes.

Eisenhart and D’Addario were both arrested in April 2018, before the changes to the Farm Bill went into effect. Both have pleaded guilty to felony drug charges, and are set for sentencing in June.

Palamarchuk, on the other hand, was arrested in January, one month after his truckload of hemp was legalized on a federal level.

Idaho State Police arrested him anyway. State authorities maintain that Idaho's definition of marijuana supersedes the federal changes, meaning that hemp remains illegal in the state.

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Scott Bandy, a prosecutor in Ada County, told KTVB after Palamarchuk's arrest that it didn't matter whether the trucker believed his cargo was legal.

"It is up to them to understand the law, there is no good-faith exception," Bandy said. "It is still illegal in Idaho, and they should do their research."

State legislators vowed to address the discrepancy between Idaho and U.S. hemp laws, but ended the 2019 session and headed home without making any changes.

Now, those backing the Change.org petition are pinning their hopes on Ada County Prosecutor Jan Bennetts to dismiss the charges against the three truckers.