Pubdate: Wed, 24 Oct 2001 Source: Independent, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2001 Conolly Publishing Ltd. Contact: http://www.eastnorthumberland.com/thisweek.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1596 Author: Tom Philp, The Independent Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmjcn.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal - Canada) Drug Squad Raids CRAMAHE FARM PROPERTY USED TO GROW MEDICAL MARIJUANA A local woman featured in a recent story about medical marijuana use sat in a Whitby jail last weekend after OPP drug squad officers raided her Cramahe Township home October 19. Late Friday afternoon officers from the Kawartha Combined Forces Drug Unit, accompanied by members of Northumberland Detachment OPP, arrested Dianne Bruce and her 18-year-old daughter Michelle after executing a search warrant on her Dundonald-area property. Dianne Bruce was remanded in custody pending her bail hearing in Cobourg on Monday. Michelle was released on her own recognizance, and allowed to return home. A warrant has been issued for the arrest of Jerry Kresjola, Bruce's partner in the medical marijuana operation. All three have been charged with Production of a Controlled Substance, and Possession of a Controlled Substance for the Purpose of Trafficking. Bruce was featured in the October 10 edition of The Independent in a story about the medical use of marijuana. The feature included information about "exemptees," people approved by Health Canada to possess or grow marijuana, or to designate someone else to legally grow the plants for them under Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (CDSA) regulations. The federal government passed amendments to Section 56 of those regulations on July 31 this year, outlining the rules for growing and possessing medical marijuana. Bruce's company, Lady Dyz Helping Hands, was producing marijuana according to those rules, she said during an earlier interview. Last Saturday Michelle Bruce phoned a reporter from The Independent to say police had seized marijuana, office equipment and a crossbow from her mother's house. Kresjola was not home when the raid took place, and she believed he was in hiding, she said. Later the same day Kresjola called The Independent to say he had "a gut feeling something was going to happen soon," and that he had removed most of the medical marijuana from the house before Friday. In a telephone interview Monday morning, OPP Sgt. Rick Barnum, who led the raid on the Bruce property, said this was a "black and white" case involving people who were growing marijuana illegally. "I think (the raid) was done very fairly, but there is no gray area here," Barnum said. "Nowhere in the (CDSA) regulations is there authority for one person to grow medical marijuana for another person." Barnum said Friday's police action was the result of "information, a complaint, that came to light three weeks ago," and took place only after "a lot of consultation with the federal crown attorney, the Ministry of Health, and others." "There was some information that we had to verify, and when it turned out to be false, that's when we decided to go execute a warrant at Dianne's place," he said. Barnum said that information did not involve Bruce's status as an exemptee under Section 56 of the CDSA regulations, but would not elaborate further. "We're not arguing that (Bruce) was growing marijuana for exemptees, or that a number of exemptees were counting on her to do so," Barnum said. "We have some sensitivity to their situation, but what Dianne was doing was illegal." "It comes down to the bottom line that no exemptee has authority to grow marijuana for anybody else, or to have somebody grow it for them," he said. Health Canada regulations provide for exemptees to designate someone else to grow the controversial herb with a license from the ministry. Under the Marijuana Medical Access Regulations, any exemptee "who wishes to have a Designated Person to grow for them" can apply with that designee for a license to produce marijuana someplace other than the exemptee's home. Aside from security precautions, and minimum distance separation requirements from other properties, the only other restriction is that non-resident growers "have not been convicted as an adult of a designated drug offence" either inside or outside Canada within the past 10 years. Although Kresjola was charged last year with a drug offence in Durham Region, neither he nor Bruce had a registered drug conviction at the time of the OPP raid. Bruce has made a formal application to be a designated grower. Health Canada spokesman Andrew Smith said his department has received applications from potential designated growers, but has not approved any to date. "I can't identify individuals, but the answer to your question is, Health Canada has not approved any licenses for designated people to grow marijuana for exemptees," Smith said. Alison Myrden, an exemptee from Burlington who has Multiple Sclerosis, is one of 40 exemptees who leased property from Bruce, and hired her to tend their medical marijuana crop. Police interpret regulations to suit their own beliefs about marijuana leading to harder drug use, she said. "I get very angry when police take our medicine away because they have decided our rules don't apply to them," Myrden said last Sunday. "Every grow I have been involved in, from B.C., to the Toronto area, to Dianne's, has been busted." "(Police) just don't get it. We are not recreational smokers (of marijuana); we are sick people," she said. Barnum estimated "about 40 pounds" of marijuana was seized from Lady Dyz, with a "street value" of $80,000. It is that "street" perception that bothers Myrden. "To the police the words 'growing marijuana' automatically means selling drugs on the street," she said. "The only street Dianne is supplying is the one with sick and dying people who just want some relief." Myrden said because most exemptees are "strain specific" it is necessary to find people who know how to cultivate different varieties of marijuana properly. Quite often these growers have had contact with the police because of a history of growing the plant. That makes them the "wrong" kind of people in police eyes, she said. "Even if you think that the people growing marijuana are not 'your' kind of people, we value them because they know how to grow our medicine," Myrden said. "Ultimately, the police are trying to force (exemptees) hands, driving us back to the street dealers by shutting down legal operations," she said. "We're literally running scared." Professor Allan Young, an Osgoode Hall lawyer who advocates for proponents of medical marijuana use, said Bruce and Kresjola may have inadvertently brought the raid upon themselves. They made several calls to police regarding trespassers, including an allegation that some intruders were armed, and that may have prompted police to act quickly, he said. "I'm only speculating, but once police had information that guns were involved, and there was potential for violence, they may have decided there was no choice but to shut Dianne and Jerry down," Young said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake