Pubdate: Sun, 19 Oct 2014 Source: Trentonian, The (NJ) Copyright: 2014 The Trentonian Contact: http://www.trentonian.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1006 Author: Scott Ketterer Page: A3 MARCH TO LEGALIZE MARIJUANA COMES TO NEW JERSEY STATEHOUSE TRENTON - Several hundred people gathered in front of the New Jersey statehouse on Saturday to push for the legalization of marijuana. The event would be the second major gathering near the statehouse where the crowd would light up in defiance of the law. The last occurred in April on Easter. No arrests appear to have been made at the event which went off without much complication, despite one individual passing out around the beginning of the event. A relative told organizers that his brother suffers from anxiety and was overcome, he was transported to an area hospital by EMT's for evaluation. For registered nurse Jennie Stormes the event would be a bittersweet goodbye. After years of fighting to get her son Jackson access to cannabis to treat his seizures in New Jersey, she has made the decision to uproot her family and head to Colorado where the drug is legal. Her son has Dravet Syndrome, a debilitating condition that causes her son to suffer seizures which could take her son away from her at any point. Stormes said that the drugs that had been prescribed just weren't working and that cannabis was the only thing that worked. She said that while using cannabis her son has only had one seizure every three weeks. "My son has failed 60 different combinations of drugs," said Stormes. "He has had the right frontal lobe of his brain removed and the two hemispheres split. He has a pacemaker for his brain in his chest - it does not work." Stormes said that once she switched to cannabis, her son only has one seizure every three weeks as opposed to routine episodes of seizures. The mother said that she was making the move to Colorado to avoid being labeled a criminal for getting her son the treatment she believes is working better than what she had been trying. She called the events leading up to her switch to cannabis as a treatment "15-years of torture." Her son does not smoke it, however. The drug is administered to Jackson in the form of an oil. "My son can die in this state," Stormes said. "He is going to live in Colorado." The rally did not focus solely on legalizing marijuana solely for recreational use, other stories like Stormes' calling for the legalization of the drug for medical use. Still, the rally ended in a bit of civil disobedience where the crowd moved across the street and lit up at 4:20 p.m. The crowd lit joints or consumed edible items in their attempt to fight back on Saturday. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom