Pubdate: Thu, 29 May 2003 Source: Washington Post (DC) Page: PG12 Copyright: 2003 The Washington Post Company Contact: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/491 Author: Lori Montgomery, Washington Post Staff Writer Bookmarks: http://www.mapinc.org/states/md/ (Maryland) http://www.mapinc.org/people/Robert+Ehrlich (Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich) http://www.mapinc.org/people/Nalepka (Joyce Nalepka) ANTI-MARIJUANA ACTIVIST PERSISTENT IN PURSUIT OF EHRLICH VETO Is Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. part of a secret cabal devoted to the legalization of marijuana? The governor's office says no, but Joyce Nalepka, a hard-charging anti-drug activist from Silver Spring, is growing increasingly worried. For weeks, Nalepka lobbied the administration to veto a bill that makes Maryland the ninth state in the nation to ease penalties on those who use marijuana to relieve suffering from cancer and other serious conditions. When word spread that Ehrlich intended to sign the measure, Nalepka showed up at the May 22 bill-signing ceremony to register her protest. She never made it. According to Nalepka, the troopers who stand guard at a reception desk on the second floor of the State House told her she couldn't join hundreds of people in the governor's reception room because "you're not on the list." When Nalepka asked to see the list, the troopers told her to am-scray. So Nalepka went downstairs "like a good little girl," though, she said, "I was just biting nails." Then she ran into a friend from the Elks Club who insisted that she come with him to wait in the governor's reception line. When the pair reached the trooper's desk, Nalepka said "the officer came down and told me I had to leave," causing an embarrassing scene that left "500 people wondering what I had done to almost get arrested." Though Nalepka voted for Ehrlich, she said the governor is now clearly "very angry with me because I really put the heat on him." While Nalepka said she understands Ehrlich's desire to show compassion for the seriously ill, he needs to recognize that he has been "interacting with people we have known as legalizers for years." Ehrlich spokeswoman Shareese DeLeaver said she is unaware that anyone was turned away last week. But DeLeaver confirmed that Nalepka is well known to the governor's staff as the blond woman who has "been sitting in our lobby for the past week." DeLeaver said Nalepka met with Ehrlich's chief of staff, his communications director and the lieutenant governor, threatening at one point to "initiate impeachment proceedings" against Ehrlich if he signed the medical marijuana bill. If Nalepka was barred from the ceremony, DeLeaver said it was probably because the troopers believed "she was going to cause a disruption." That wasn't a bad bet. Three years ago, Nalepka showed up to protest then-Gov. Parris N. Glendening's decision to sign a law that made Maryland the fourth state in the nation to legalize production of industrial hemp, a non-intoxicating cousin of marijuana. As state photographers snapped away, Nalepka stood behind Glendening holding a bumper sticker that said, "Boycott Pot (and all hemp products)." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake