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Source: FFWD (CN AB)
Copyright: 2000 FFWD
Contact: info@ffwd.greatwest.ca
Address: #220, 932 - 17 Avenue S.W., Calgary, Alberta.  T2T 0A4
Fax: 403 - 244 - 1431
Website: http://www.greatwest.ca/ffwd/
Author: Maureen McNamee
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/grant.htm (Krieger, Grant)

KRIEGER ALLOWED TO GROW MARIJUANA


Calgary activist Grant W.  Krieger won the right to grow his own pot for one year after an Alberta judge ruled that a portion of the federal law prohibiting the cultivation of marijuana for medicinal purposes is unconstitutional.  However, Krieger still faces charges of trafficking. 

"(The judge) gave me permission to cultivate my own medicine until the government gets their laws straightened out," says Krieger, who uses marijuana to help ease the side effects of multiple sclerosis. 

"I am feeling excellent about it.  I am quite happy.  At last my pleas didn't fall on deaf ears again."

On Monday, December 11, Justice Darlene Acton ruled that the federal government is in violation of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, noting that although people who can apply for exemptions allowing them to use marijuana for medicinal purposes, they are still unable to access it legally. 

She gave Krieger a one-year exemption which allows him to grow the drug for personal use. 

Krieger says that at the end of one year, if the government has not corrected its laws, Acton indicated she will strike down the act and it will be "open growing season".  He adds that this is the second or third message that's been sent to Ottawa on the issue of medicinal marijuana. 

"We are the anecdotal evidence that this is actually doing something and you're denying it to people."

Deb Harper, a former member of the now-defunct Universal Compassion Club, says the news is very encouraging for those who support the legalization of medicinal marijuana.  The UCC encountered several obstacles in its efforts to help people gain access to medicinal marijuana - its members are now supporting other clubs which she declined to name. 

"The fact that it is still illegal has made it very difficult for the people involved," she explains. 

"We'll definitely be watching to see what happens."

Krieger, whose son ran for the Marijuana Party in the recent federal election, considers the decision a big step forward.  However, there are more challenges ahead.  He will be arraigned January 10 on charges of trafficking, and then plans to fight the charge in front of a jury.  He says he is also facing jail time for previous convictions and is interested to find out whether they will honour the judge's decision and allow him to possess marijuana while in prison. 

Krieger recently started a research foundation on cannabis, and he and his wife are selling a hemp cookbook to raise funding.  The book is available at several hemp stores in Calgary. 


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