Pubdate: Thu, 01 May 2003
Source: Toronto Sun (CN ON)
Copyright: 2003, Canoe Limited Partnership.
Contact:  http://www.fyitoronto.com/torsun.shtml
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/457
Author: Jason Botchford

REEFER REMEDY

Sickly Group Battle For Medical Marijuana

Toronto's Terry Parker has been fighting, and winning, marijuana-related 
court cases since the 1970s and there's no end in sight. "I've already had 
eight decisions in my favour. There should be a mention of that in the 
Guinness Book of World Records," Parker said.

"I don't see myself ever stopping as long as there is marijuana 
prohibition. I have a conscience, I am aware of people suffering and I'll 
find some way to expose the goods here."

The goods are marijuana and Parker, who suffers from violent seizures -- a 
symptom of his epilepsy -- is convinced the smoke is the reason he's alive 
today.

"The only reason I am surviving is because I consume marijuana," Parker 
said. "It controls what would be devastating daily seizures."

Confused Hypocrisy

The landmark court rulings in Parker's favour are part of a foundation of 
court decisions which have systematically stripped away Canada's marijuana 
laws, leaving a lot of questions and a need for legislative changes.

- - In 1997, Judge Patrick Sheppard stayed charges of cultivation and 
possession of marijuana against Parker after ruling sections of the 
Controlled Drug and Substance Act (CDSA) are unconstitutional.

- - In 2000, in a unanimous judgment by Justices Marvin Catzman, Louise 
Charron and Marc Rosenberg, the court declared the prohibition of marijuana 
possession in the CDSA of no force and therefore unconstitutional. The 
court ruled that if Ottawa does not clarify the law within 12 months, the 
law would be struck down.

- - In 2003, Ontario court judge Justice Douglas Phillip threw out a 
marijuana charge in Windsor against a 16-year-old after lawyer Brian 
McAllister argued in court that, because of the Parker decision, there is 
effectively no law prohibiting the possession of 30 grams or less of marijuana.

Despite these decisions, Parker doesn't think he's made a difference.

"There is still prohibition against marijuana, isn't there?" Parker said. 
"The law should have been changed 50 years ago."

Canada's medicinal grass laws are a study in confused hypocrisy. There is 
no legal way for many of those who have been granted a Section 56 exemption 
to access marijuana.

Licensed personal-grower criteria is difficult to obtain. Doctors are being 
instructed by their representative associations not to prescribe medical 
marijuana.

Thousands of patients who have applied under Health Canada's Medical 
Marijuana Access Regulations (MMAR) have been denied.

"My Section 56 exemption says I can possess a little bit more than three 
ounces of pot at any given time, but it doesn't say I can purchase it and 
it doesn't even say I can smoke it. I have no legal way to access it," said 
Toronto's Allan Love, a 49-year-old who has HIV and multiple seizure disorders.

"I just want what I feel is fair and right: Give me my medicine."

Love now buys as much as he can afford at $9 per gram from the Toronto 
Compassion Centre, a supplier of marijuana for medicinal purposes.

A lawsuit launched by medicinal marijuana users is aiming to abolish the 
federal law against possessing and using pot with a constitutional challenge.

"It's going to be a long process and we don't have time to wait. We're the 
generation making the change but we shouldn't have to die for it," said Stu 
Chamney, whose wife Marylynne, 37, is one of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit. 
She suffers from seizures that are controlled by marijuana.

The family has spent $100,000 over the past six years on her marijuana 
medicine which has left them bankrupt.

Failure In Democracy

But in a twist, Marylynne and the seven others named in the suit -- chronic 
pain sufferers -- are not suing the federal government for any money -- 
just access to safe, affordable marijuana for treatment.

"It shows just how principled these people are," said Alan Young, one of 
the country's crusading pot lawyers.

The civil suit demands three remedies:

- - Strike down Health Canada's Medical Marijuana Access Regulations as too 
restrictive.

- - End cannabis prohibition.

- - Force Health Canada to distribute pot grown by Prairie Plant Systems - 
the government-contracted firm which runs a grow operation in Flin Flon, 
Manitoba - to med-pot patients.

Noting a new Sun-Leger poll and a string of others showing a vast majority 
of Canadians want lighter marijuana laws, Young said pot prohibition has 
been a failure in democracy.

"The numbers, in terms of support for marijuana law reforms, have been 
consistent since 1975," Young said.

"There has been a great deal of consensus in the country but without the 
ongoing litigation, I am not convinced there would be any political will to 
make changes happen."

In another case Young worked on earlier this year, Justice Sydney Lederman 
declared the current MMAR unconstitutional but gave the government an 
ultimatum -- fix the regulations or supply the pot itself by July 9.

Young is also part of an upcoming Supreme Court case involving convicted 
pot smokers who claim possession laws are unconstitutional. Seen as a 
flagship case for marijuana users across Canada who want pot legalized, it 
has been postponed before in light of the federal government's pending 
decision to introduce legislation to decriminalize marijuana.

Young said he isn't yet convinced this is the year Canada will make changes 
to marijuana laws.

"We've been down this road. If it was something the government was going to 
deal with, it would have been dealt with by now," Young said.

Young said he believes winning in court is the only way to force the 
government's hand.
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MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens