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Miller’s crusade to make medical marijuana legal

By Hempology | October 31, 2007

Ocean County Observer, NJ
29 Oct 2007
Don Bennett

MEDICAL MARIJUANA HOPEFUL’S TOP ISSUE

TOMS RIVER — James Miller concedes he is a “one-trick pony” in his campaign for the state Senate in the 10th District, keeping a promise he made to his late wife before she died of multiple sclerosis that he would try to get the use of marijuana for medical purposes legalized.

“I’ve seen that minds can change,”

Miller said of his crusade to make it legal for people to ease their pain by smoking or eating the plant.

Rep. Rob Andrews, D-1st, was an opponent who has seen the light, he said.

In his wife’s case, he said, it helped her deal with her pain, and to gain flexibility in minutes that used to take hours of working together to achieve.

“Marijuana was her best medicine, a godsend,” he said told the Ocean County Observer’s editorial board.

Efforts to get Sen. Andrew Ciesla, R-10th, to help went nowhere, Miller said, one of the reasons he is running as a Libertarian against Ciesla in next week’s general election.

His wife, Cheryl, died four years ago, and he said he is keeping the promise to press for the compassionate use of marijuana.

Bills have been introduced to do just that, but they are not moving.

“I said if they didn’t move I’d run,” Miller explained, saying those who can benefit from marijuana have “nobody sticking up for them. Somebody’s working for them now.”

His campaign is a “no-money-raised, no-money-spent affair,” and he does not know or subscribe to the Libertarian Party platform.

If he won, he’d hire Republicans and Democrats for his staff, listen to their recommendations, and “see where the truth lies,” he said.

“I’d do and say what I feel is right,” he said.

He expects Ciesla to be re-elected, but said he hopes the incumbent gets less than 50 percent of the vote.

Other issues Miller cited were the delay in dualizing Route 9, and the likely cost increases that result; the reform of the state school funding system; and the lack of a cardiac care center at Community Medical Center.

He said he was unaware that CMC did not have one until he read about it in the Observer this week.

While his party wants to get rid of the Pinelands Commission, Miller said he has not studied that issue and has no position.

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