Pubdate: Tue, 01 Aug 2000 Source: New Brunswick Telegraph Journal (CN NK) Copyright: 2000 New Brunswick Publishing Company Contact: http://www.nbpub.nb.ca/comments.htm Website: http://www.telegraphjournal.com/ Author: Roger LeBlanc POT RULING BITTERSWEET FOR N.B. MAN Canada's Marijuana Laws May Have Been Ruled Unconstitutional, But It's Too Little, Too Late For Jim Wood. The Ontario Court of Appeal ruled Monday the law prohibiting the possession and cultivation of marijuana is unconstitutional and fails to recognize the plant's medical qualities. Mr. Wood of Saint John is overjoyed to hear this news, but he still must abide by a 7 p.m.-to-7 a.m. curfew, perform community service and consent to random physical searches - all in accordance with his June sentence for growing and possessing marijuana. Possession and cultivation, he says, that was targeted towards alleviating his severe back pain. "It's the same for me. I was told to choose between my health and what works for me,'' Mr. Wood says. "I'm being punished for life because of my health. People don't realize what's really happening.'' While this decision will undoubtedly provide new hope for others seeking to use pot to ease their ills, Mr. Wood says he's going to serve out his sentence and try to move on with his life. However, with a criminal record hanging over his head, he notes, that could be difficult. Monday's decision comes from the Crown's appeal of an earlier decision that stayed charges against Terry Parker. The Toronto man says he smokes pot to control his epilepsy, which at one point was causing up to 80 seizures a week over 40 years. Justice J. A. Rosenberg's written statement says Mr. Parker proved the plant's use for alleviating his seizures. Mr. Parker's rights were being infringed by a law which failed to accept this, he explains. "I have concluded that forcing Parker to choose between his health and imprisonment violates his right to liberty and security of the person,'' Mr. Rosenberg writes. Accordingly, he declared the prohibition on the possession of marijuana to be of no force and effect. However, since this would leave a gap in the regulatory scheme until Parliament could amend the legislation, he suspended the declaration for a year. During this period, the current law remains in full force. Mr. Wood, the owner of Hemp N.B., a shop that specializes in hemp-based goods, was convicted two years ago after RCMP found 57 marijuana plants growing on his farm near MacDonald's Point. New Brunswick Provincial Court Judge James McNamee ruled Mr. Wood provided evidence showing only a possibility, not a probability, that pot eased his back pain caused by multiple car accidents. Mr. McNamee therefore dismissed Mr. Wood's medical-use claim. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk