Pubdate: Fri, 10 Dec 2004 Source: Burlington County Times (NJ) Copyright: 2004 Calkins Newspapers. Inc. Contact: http://www.phillyburbs.com/feedback/content_bct.shtml Website: http://www.phillyburbs.com/burlingtoncountytimes/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2128 Author: Danielle Camilli Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Cheryl+Miller (Cheryl Miller) TOMS RIVER MAN FINED FOR DISORDERLY CONDUCT EVESHAM - Jim Miller of Toms River said yesterday that he only wanted to bring his message about legal marijuana use for medical purposes to the crowds of people gathered for President Bush's visit to the township in October. He said he didn't come to the event at the township recreation center on Tuckerton Road to be a rabble-rouser or to get arrested. However, by the end of the Oct. 18 rally, he was in handcuffs, arrested and charged with disorderly conduct for "obstructing traffic by pushing an unoccupied wheelchair in the roadway and refusing to obey police instructions." Yesterday, Miller pleaded guilty in municipal court here to a lesser charge. He admitted he violated the township's "peace and good order ordinance" when he disobeyed a police officer's orders during the rally. Evesham Municipal Judge Karen J. Caplan fined him $400, plus court costs for the offense. Miller was the only person arrested at the rally. "The only thing I did wrong that day was not move behind the barricade when the police officer told me to," Miller, 52, said. "I've been an activist for more than a decade and have never been arrested outside of Washington, D.C." Miller and wife, Cheryl, who died last year at the age of 57 after a long battle with multiple sclerosis, began advocating for legal marijuana use for medical purposes in 1991. "I was keeping a deathbed promise to my wife that I would continue to work for medical marijuana," he said yesterday. "When I saw that it worked better than any medicine and was so effective, I got involved. When I realized it was a political matter, I got political." Miller brought one of his wife's wheelchairs, the one he calls her memorial wheelchair, to the rally. A sign on the chair read, in part, "George Bush flip flopped on medical marijuana." Another sign was a tribute to his late wife. Miller contended he was not blocking traffic during the rally, just trying to leave the parking lot where protesters were held during and immediately after the president's visit. Miller said he plans to contact an attorney to discuss whether his constitutional rights were violated when he was not allowed to leave the parking lot when he wanted to. Caplan told Miller that she recognized his right to protest as one of the "most treasured amendments in our Constitution," but cautioned him to do so in the appropriate time, manner and place to ensure public safety. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek