Pubdate: Tue, 26 Jun 2001 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2001 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.ottawacitizen.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Jake Rupert Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjparty.htm (Canadian Marijuana Party) IT'S LEGAL TO THROW PIE IN YOUR OWN FACE Marijuana Party Boss Cleared After Cream Hits Officer's Cheek Marc Boris St-Maurice, leader of the Marijuana Party, says he is happy that the Canadian justice system respects every man's right to throw a cream pie in his own face -- even if a bit of the sugary goo lands on the cheek of a Mountie. Mr. St-Maurice, 32, of Montreal, was charged with assaulting a police officer after a pie incident at a marijuana legalization rally on Parliament Hill on Nov. 25. The charge was withdrawn in an Ottawa court yesterday by assistant Crown attorney Ursula Hendel after she watched an amateur video of the incident. "Upon reviewing the video, the Crown takes the position there is no prospect of conviction," she said. The video shows Mr. St-Maurice with a loaded pie trying to approach a statue of Emily Murphy, a women's rights advocate and, Mr. St-Maurice said, anti-marijuana crusader who helped bring in prohibition of the drug in 1923. As Mr. St-Maurice approaches the statue, two RCMP officers bar his access. When it is clear he can't get close enough to hit the statue, Mr. St-Maurice nails himself in the face It should be noted that this particular pie was a baked good of considerable mass, and as Mr. St-Maurice hit himself, some of the cream hit the left cheek of an officer standing beside him. When this happened, the Mounties took their man into custody and he was charged. After the Crown withdrew the charges yesterday, Mr. St-Maurice, who has convictions for marijuana possession and mischief, explained his actions. "I absolutely did not mean to hit the officer," he said. "The RCMP would not let me near the statue, and I was left with a live pie. "The only honourable thing to do at that point was disarm the pie on myself, which I did." Defence lawyer Lorne Goldstein praised Ms. Hendel for withdrawing the charge based on the video evidence. "To the Crown's credit, once they did see the video, they knew this was a silly charge," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: GD