Pubdate: Sat, 05 Apr 2014 Source: Edmonton Journal (CN AB) Copyright: 2014 The Edmonton Journal Contact: http://www.edmontonjournal.com/opinion/letters/letters-to-the-editor.html Website: http://www.edmontonjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/134 Author: Douglas Quan BUDDING MARIJUANA FIRM HITS LEGAL SNAG IN B.C. Ontario-Grown Pot Seized By Kelowna Police Tweed Marijuana Inc. became the first publicly traded medical pot company in Canada on Friday, but behind the scenes the Ontario production facility has apparently been searching for answers after a run-in with the law. On Monday, the company was hoping to beef up its stock with a shipment of medical marijuana products that it says it acquired from B.C. growers who had previously been licensed to grow their marijuana at home. Even though the company had received Health Canada's approval to import such products, the Mounties, who the company said it had invited to inspect the shipment, ended up seizing it at the Kelowna International Airport. "We felt everything was done absolutely correctly," Tweed chairman Bruce Linton said from the company's office in Smiths Falls, Ont. "When you call police to say, 'Come look at this,' you believe you have everything in order." The case seems to highlight an ongoing confusion around the old legal regime, which allowed licensees to grow medical pot in their basements, and the new regime, which restricts production to commercial growers, such as Tweed. As of Friday, the company - one of 12 licensed so far in Canada - had still not received an explanation for the seizure, Linton said. Sgt. Duncan Pound, an RCMP spokesman in B.C., refused to comment on the reasons for the seizure. "We typically do not confirm or deny investigations unless there is an investigational or public safety need. Specific details about any investigation only become known when that investigation results in charges being laid by Crown Counsel," he said via email. Before the April 1 switch to the new regulatory regime, individuals who previously had personal-production licenses were allowed to sell what "starting materials" they had, such as seeds and plants, to one of the new commercial producers. Linton said Friday his company hadn't originally intended to purchase other medical marijuana products; the initial business plan was to grow about 25 varieties of plant at the company's 160,000-square-foot growing facility. But when the company started accepting customers early in February, demand for its products proved much higher than expected, Linton said. It became clear, he said, that the amounts sought per patient were "several multiples" higher than what the company had planned for. When Tweed pointed this out to Health Canada officials, the company was told that other commercial growers were buying medical pot from growers who had been licensed under the old regime. The only stipulation was that they needed federal authorization to do so. Health Canada spokeswoman Sara Lauer confirmed Friday that Tweed received the go-ahead. Linton speculated that the RCMP seizure may have been the result of "confusion" because of overlapping regulations. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D