Pubdate: Fri, 10 Jan 2003
Source: Globe and Mail (Canada)
Page: A5
Copyright: 2003, The Globe and Mail Company
Contact:  http://www.globeandmail.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168
Author: Jane Gadd, Courts Reporter
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmjcn.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal - Canada)

POT REGULATIONS VIOLATE CHARTER: ONTARIO COURT

Canada's marijuana laws took another blow yesterday when the Ontario 
Superior Court ruled that Ottawa's regulations for medical users are 
unconstitutional because patients have no access to a legal supply of the drug.

In a case involving seriously ill Canadians and "compassion clubs" that 
provide them with marijuana to fight pain, nausea and weight loss, Mr. 
Justice Sidney Lederman said the federal government must pass regulations 
within six months to ensure medical users a legal supply or see its entire 
marijuana-possession law struck down.

"This has great implications for the everyday user as well as medical 
users," Joseph Neuberger, one of the lawyers representing patients, said in 
an interview.

"If they don't replace the regulations, then possession will be legal for 
anyone. We have to wait six months, but it's a great victory and we are 
very gratified."

Judge Lederman ruled that the patients' rights to life, liberty and 
security of the person under section 7 of the Charter of Rights and 
Freedoms were violated because they were forced to turn to the black market 
to obtain their medication.

"Access is compromised because there is simply no legal way for individuals 
with production licences to obtain the marijuana seeds required to grow 
marijuana," the judge wrote. "Consorting with criminal drug dealers strikes 
me as a relatively risky means of obtaining medicine."

Judge Lederman said it is up to Parliament to decide how to provide medical 
marijuana -- whether through regulated distribution centres or by licensing 
compassion clubs.

The impugned Medical Marijuana Access Regulations were Ottawa's attempt to 
respond to the Ontario Court of Appeal's 2000 ruling that the Controlled 
Drugs and Substances Act was unconstitutional because it failed to provide 
an exception for medical use of marijuana.

Epileptic Terry Parker, the winner in that case, was also one of the 
applicants in the case ruled upon yesterday.

He and nine other Canadians suffering from illnesses ranging from multiple 
sclerosis and cancer to hepatitis and AIDS argued that although the 
regulations made it legal for them to have marijuana, this was of little 
use when no legal source was available.

They also complained about the need for specialists' approval and lengthy 
paperwork to obtain an exemption from the law.

It is the second time this week that Ontario courts have given Ottawa's 
marijuana laws the thumbs down.

On Monday, an Ontario Court judge threw out a marijuana-possession charge 
against a Windsor youth after accepting a lawyer's argument that the appeal 
court ruling means it is no longer illegal for any Canadian to possess 
marijuana.

That ruling is under appeal, and Judge Lederman said he had not considered 
it in his decision on the medical-marijuana case.

The federal Department of Justice issued a guarded statement on Judge 
Lederman's ruling.

"Counsel are carefully reviewing the reasons in the decision and will 
advise the minister accordingly on the next step to take," department 
spokeswoman Dorette Pollard said yesterday.

Ottawa has 30 days to decide whether to appeal the ruling.

Justice Minister Martin Cauchon has pledged to introduce new legislation on 
marijuana this spring, including decriminalization of possession of small 
amounts for personal use.
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MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager