Ed
Forchion doesn't deny it. There was a pound of marijuana - "high-grade
California Kush" - in the trunk of his rent-a-wreck when he was stopped
in Mount Holly on Thursday night by a state trooper.
The
dreadlocked Rastafarian - better known as "NJ Weedman," who ran
unsuccessfully for New Jersey governor and U.S. and state representative
on the Marijuana Party ticket - was released from the Burlington County
jail on Tuesday after posting $50,000 cash bail for drug possession and
distribution charges.
He didn't
get intend to be arrested, said Forchion, 45. "But now that I've been
charged, it feels like destiny. That's exactly what I wanted to do."
Forchion,
who moved from Browns Mills two years ago to open a medical-marijuana
dispensary in Los Angeles called the Liberty Bell Temple, said he
returned to South Jersey last week "to spend a little time in the
courts."
Forchion
has been a vocal critic of the New Jersey law, passed in January, that
legalized marijuana use by patients with cancer, AIDS, glaucoma and
other debilitating diseases.
"I was
coming home on a mission to file some paper work and challenge it,"
Forchion said on Tuesday.
The
criminal statute in New Jersey states that marijuana has no medicinal
value, he said. The new measure does recognize a medical use for the
drug, but only gives "a certain class of people" permission to use it.
Forchion
said the law violates the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment.
His
arrest on Thursday gives him the opportunity to take his stand to the
New Jersey courts, he said.
"I'm
going to fight," Forchion said, acknowledging that he could be sentenced
to seven years in prison if convicted. "I'm not afraid to go to jail. I
think I can win."
Forchion
was driving a rented 2001 Pontiac Grand Am Thursday after 10 p.m. when
he pulled up to a stop light on Route 38. He said he had been visiting
his children in Burlington County and was headed to Camden County, where
he planned to stay with other relatives.
A trooper
who pulled alongside Forchion said the Pontiac rolled into the
intersection before the light turned green, said Sgt. Steve Jones, a
state police spokesman.
After
stopping the Pontiac, the officer smelled burnt marijuana and saw a
glass smoking pipe on the rear floor. Forchion also had two outstanding
warrants, one for non-payment of child support and another for a
delinquent traffic fine, Jones said.
Forchion
says the pound of marijuana troopers found in a suitcase was for
personal use. He denies he had any intention of selling it.
"A pound
of marijuana is like a carton of cigarettes to me. What do they think I
was going to do? Sell nickel bags on the corner?" he scoffed. "I'm the
Weedman."
Personal message to my future juror, keep quiet dont tell anyone your going to flatout acquit no matter what the prosecution presents - Just say "NOT GUILTY" utilize Jury Nullification to end this ridiculous war on potheads.