Call & Times

Linda Horan, 64; challenged N.H. marijuana law during late-stage cancer

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CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — A New Hampshire woman who was suffering from latestage cancer when she won permission to buy medical marijuana in Maine before it was available in her home state died Monday.

Linda Horan was 64. Her death was confirmed by Democratic state Rep. Renny Cushing, a friend and cosponsor of New Hampshire’s medical marijuana law.

“When she couldn’t even walk, she still stood up to the state of New Hampshire and asked for health care justice,” Cushing said.

Horan, a retired telephone company worker and longtime labor activist, was diagnosed in July with advanced lung cancer.

A New Hampshire law allowing medical marijuana was passed in 2013, but the state wasn’t ready to begin issuing cards allowing people to use it in November when Horan sued seeking access to it. She argued she and other seriously ill people were suffering because they couldn’t use marijuana to alleviate their symptoms.

Later in November, a New Hampshire judge ordered the state to issue Horan a card so she could get medical marijuana in Maine.

“I’m in tears — tears of joy. Not just for me, but for everyone else who will have the opportunit­y to get the medicine they need,” Horan said after the judge’s decision. “If I’m going down, I’m going down swinging.”

She got the marijuana in December in Portland, Maine.

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