Legalizing of Medical Marijuana to Be on Agenda Next Month
May 9, 2006
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TRENTON—New Jersey would become the 12th state to legalize marijuana
for people with debilitating medical conditions under a bill slated to
be discussed next month by state lawmakers.
Sen. Joseph Vitale, chairman of a Senate health panel, said he's
scheduled a June 8 discussion to hear from experts on the bill proposed
by Sen. Nicholas Scutari. Vitale said he supports the concept, but has
questions.
"It's really an effort to provide some sort of relief for people and
some compassion," said Vitale, D-Middlesex.
The legislation has long been proposed by Scutari, D-Union, but has
never received a legislative hearing.
Though 11 states allow medical marijuana, in June 2005 the U.S. Supreme
Court ruled the federal government can prosecute people who use
marijuana no matter what a state law says.
Terrence P. Farley, an Ocean County assistant prosecutor and spokesman
for two state anti-drug law enforcement groups, said the bill is a
veiled attempt to legalize drugs.
"This is how they're trying to get marijuana legalized," said Farley,
who also is director of the county anti-narcotics force.
The Assembly hasn't scheduled any hearings on the bill, but Gov. Jon S.
Corzine said last year that he would sign a medical marijuana bill into
law.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration recently reiterated its opposition
to medical marijuana. The American Medical Association, National Cancer
Institute, American Cancer Society and National Multiple Sclerosis
Society reject its use. An April report by federal
Department of Human Services agencies found no data supported marijuana
for general medical use.
The National Academy of Sciences has found marijuana can help patients
with chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting and AIDS wasting.
Scutari's bill lists cancer, glaucoma, HIV and AIDS, wasting syndrome,
chronic pain, severe nausea, seizures and persistent muscle spasms as
among the conditions eligible for medical
marijuana usage.
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