Pubdate: Wed, 17 Apr 2002 Source: Philadelphia Weekly (PA) Copyright: 2002 Philadelphia Weekly Contact: http://www.phillyweekly.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1091 Author: John Valania Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v02/n690/a12.html Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) DEFENSE TACTIC UP IN SMOKE Despite warnings from state officials not to speak to the press, the Weedman will not go quietly. On April 3 Ed Forchion--aka the New Jersey Weedman, a marijuana legalization advocate who made headlines by lighting up at the Liberty Bell and on the floor of the New Jersey State Assembly, among other public places--was released from Bayside State Prison in Leesberg, N.J. Forchion won early release from a 10-year drug-trafficking sentence as part of the state's Intensive Supervisory Parole program. Despite his release, Forchion refuses to give up the fight to put New Jersey's drug laws on trial using a legal technique called jury nullification, which allows jurors to refuse to convict if they believe the law in question is unfair or unconstitutional. Forchion's saga began five years ago when he was arrested for receiving a Federal Express shipment containing 40 pounds of marijuana. Facing a 20-year prison sentence, Forchion became a high-profile advocate for legalizing pot, risking additional prison time while awaiting trial by lighting up in public places in what he calls acts of civil disobedience. The Camden County Public Defender's Office disavowed the case after refusing to invoke the jury nullification defense--telling Forchion it was illegal for an attorney in New Jersey to inform a jury of its right to question the state's drug laws. Forchion defended himself and eventually accepted a plea bargain that would combine all the pending charges against him: the '97 FedEx bust as well as assorted arrests for possession while awaiting trial. In December 2000, just before reporting to prison, Forchion filed an appeal asking for a retrial and made a formal request to the courts for the transcripts of his trial and pre-trial hearings. Forchion claims the transcripts were withheld until April 1, 2002--two days before his release from prison. He is now awaiting word from the Third Circuit Federal Court of Appeals (Docket No.- 01-3171) about his retrial, and if he gets it, he says he will again try to put the state's marijuana laws on trial through jury nullification. "The whole trial was a mockery," he says. "My constitutional rights were withheld because I was talking about marijuana. I want to try and enlighten as many people as possible about jury nullification--it's a powerful we-the-people weapon. The war on drugs is being waged against the people of this country, and this is how we fight back." - --- MAP posted-by: Ariel