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‘West Wing’ Creator Pleads Not Guilty in Drug Case

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Aaron Sorkin, Emmy Award-winning creator of NBC’s hit television series “The West Wing,” pleaded not guilty Wednesday to drug charges stemming from his arrest two weeks ago at Burbank Airport.

Sorkin, 39, was charged Monday with one felony count each of possession of cocaine base and possession of hallucinogenic mushrooms. He also is charged with a misdemeanor count of possession of marijuana.

Sorkin was arrested April 15 after an X-ray machine at a security checkpoint in the airport detected something suspicious in a carry-on case. After security personnel searched the case and found tightly wrapped paper bundles of drugs, police were called, authorities said.

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The Studio City resident is due back in Burbank Superior Court on June 4, when Commissioner Kirkland R. Nyby will decide if Sorkin is eligible for a drug rehabilitation program, said district attorney’s spokeswoman Sandi Gibbons.

Gibbons said Sorkin’s chances of being eligible for the drug treatment were good because he appeared not to have any prior drug-related violations.

Sorkin, who is free on $10,000 bail, told The Times in a 1999 interview: “I’m the same as any other addict. I’m only a phone call away from getting loaded again.”

Because only hallucinogenic mushrooms were initially found and Sorkin had no prior record, prosecutors deemed the crime a misdemeanor and handed it off to the Burbank city attorney, Gibbons said. But after lab tests revealed the cocaine base, the case was sent back to the district attorney as a felony, Gibbons said.

Sorkin’s publicist released a statement Wednesday, saying Sorkin is “genuinely humbled by the situation he is facing. It is his sincere hope that his actions do not affect or reflect upon those with whom he works, cares for and respects.”

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