Pubdate: Mon, 14 Apr 2014 Source: Trentonian, The (NJ) Copyright: 2014 The Trentonian Contact: http://www.trentonian.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1006 Author: Jeff Edelstein WANT TO (ILLEGALLY) SMOKE POT ON THE STATE HOUSE STEPS? YOUR CHANCE COMES SUNDAY AT 4:20 P.M. Wasn't so long ago police officers used to kick Ed Forchion in his nether regions before they'd arrest him. Now, they ask for his autograph. In short: Things have changed for the NJWeedman. "I was at the Statehouse a few years ago, and I had a weed shirt on," Forchion recalled. "I wasn't even there to protest or anything, I just had to run into the bill room, I wanted to read something, but I was banned from the building and I ended up getting kicked in the (groin) and going to jail." Today? "When I went to pick up my city permit for next week's rally, a Trenton cop asked me for my autograph," he said. "Basically, I'm not a wacko now, not some lone dude screaming about smoking weed. Most people agree with me." This coming Sunday - 4/20, naturally - Forchion, along with Jawara McIntosh (aka Tosh 1 and the son of legendary reggae star and marijuana legalization activist Peter Tosh) will be hosting "4/20 at Noon," a march and rally in support of New Jersey Sen. Nicholas Scutari's marijuana legalization bill. Marchers are meeting across from the Statehouse at noon, organizing a walk from the train station at 2 p.m., and, if Forchion's plans go off without a hitch, staging a massive smoke-in on the Statehouse steps at - uhhuh - 4:20 p.m. Forchion said he expects at least 500 likeminded (and high-minded, sorry) individuals to put their Easter plans on hold to come out and make their point. And that point is ... "It's a great opportunity to support Sen. Scutari's bill," Forchion said. "Listen, Chris Christie has drawn his line in the sand on the issue of marijuana. He's said he won't amend the medical marijuana bill further, said legalization won't happen on his watch. This is an opportunity for the public to not only cross his line, but to do it publicly, with hundreds of people, demanding legalization." So yes. Forchion plans on having hundreds, if not thousands, of protesters light up their joints, bowls, bongs, apple cores, what have you, all at the same time, all in public, all on the steps and surrounding area of the Statehouse. And then he expects ... "I guess I expect to be arrested, as a leader of this, but I don't know," Forchion said. "I don't think the police are going to be in head cracking mode. Honestly, I think this is an opportunity for the police to side with ' we the people' and not engage in head cracking, which I'm sure law and order types like Christie would want to see happen. But I don't think it will." Truly, the only bigger story than 500 arrests would be the opposite: Zero arrests. "I think the police are going to be respectful," Forchion said. "Attitudes have changed." Just imagine, for a moment, being Forchion. For whatever reason, you decide to pretty much dedicate your life - back in 1997 - to the legalization of marijuana. You're more or less a voice in the wilderness. Fast forward to today and the wilderness has been overrun. Marijuana is legal in two states, decriminalized in another 16, used for medicine in a handful of other states. The tide has turned. "I went from the weirdo in the 90s to the hero in 2014," Forchion said. "We've already won the war of marijuana. The people have won. The government has just refused to quit. Public opinion is clearly on our side, and growing." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom