Pubdate: Mon, 04 Nov 2002 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2002 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawa/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Kelly Egan 'I KNEW THEY WOULD BE COMING' OPP Raids Business Of Man Who Helps Users Of Medicinal Marijuana RENFREW -- In February 1993, Ed Sweet, on a clean and sober morning, began a new stage in his life by nearly ending it. He flew wildly over a bump on a snowmobile, landing 30 metres away with a broken back, a severed spinal cord and a rattled cranium. He was in a coma for three weeks. When he woke up, his trade as a drywaller, 18 years in the making, was over. Mr. Sweet, now 42, learned to live in a wheelchair, went back to complete his Grade 12, and cast about for new prospects. Turns out permanent paralysis wasn't a great resume addition. So, with the help of a job counsellor, Mr. Sweet was able to sneak into a government program aimed at helping the disabled back to work. With $1,200 a month in government assistance for the first year, he was able to open Sweet Hydroponic Gardens, a hydroponic shop operating on the edge of town near the tourist information booth. And, to relieve the spasms in his atrophied legs, he smoked marijuana -- and grew it too -- in his home. He doesn't attempt to hide this illegal conduct. "The day I opened the door on this place, I knew they would be coming," Mr. Sweet said last week. Oct. 4 was the day. Mr. Sweet said about a dozen police officers, some holding rifles and wearing bullet-proof vests, burst into the front and side doors of his business at about noon, as he worked behind the counter. As an officer read from a search warrant, others fanned out through the store, photographing item after item. After a thorough search, they seized his daily supply of marijuana, some photographs of flowering plants and a book about hydroponic growing. When he was told his home would be searched too, he handed over the keys and told the officers where to find his little grow operation. There, they found 10 marijuana plants, only three of which had any value, Mr. Sweet said. He did not know it at the time, but OPP drug squad officers, on the same day, had raided a residence in town and shot a man in the stomach. They weren't playing around. In the intervening month, Mr. Sweet has not been charged with any offence, though the name of his business has been bandied about in news stories. Ever since, he has stewed, even writing an open letter to the Renfrew Mercury, rallying support. "I don't think it's right for them to search my business and try to ruin my reputation," said Mr. Sweet, who is married with a teenaged daughter. "This has nothing to do with my business. I've put my house on the line to open this business. I'm here six days a week, eight hours a day. "Smoking marijuana has not hurt me in any way, shape or form. I am not a bum." The OPP drug squad declined to comment on the matter, except to say charges are pending. Mr. Sweet feels like a man caught between colliding -- if not outright hypocritical -- government initiatives on the use of medical marijuana. In July 2001, Health Canada made it legal for marijuana to be used in "compassionate" cases, such as for those suffering from serious illnesses. Applicants had to obtain a licence, however, and a second licence to grow their own supply. Among the categories for compassionate relief are terminal illnesses, AIDS, multiple sclerosis, spinal cord injuries, some types of cancer, severe forms of arthritis and epilepsy. A declaration from at least one specialist is also required and the physician must first attempt "all conventional treatments." However, the largest malpractice fund in Canada sent a letter a year ago to 60,000 physicians with a stern warning: doctors could expose themselves to lawsuits and disciplinary action if they prescribe marijuana without detailed knowledge of the drug's risks, benefits and dosage. Such information, the Canadian Medical Protective Association was quick to add, is not available, putting physicians in an impossible position. Barrys Bay lawyer Rick Reimer, who has an exemption to use marijuana for his multiple sclerosis, said the federal government has simply tossed the "hot potato" into the laps of Canada's doctors. "They, in turn, are acting in a predictable way by saying 'we're not going to make that decision'." He also said the number of legal plants assigned to an individual with a licence is ridiculously low, far below the number required for a steady supply. As a result, he estimated about 90 per cent of the medical marijuana being used in Canada comes from the black market. Mr. Sweet has about 15 clients who have licences to use marijuana for medical reasons. He says it's his job to help them grow better weed, so the patients can have a reliable supply of medicine. He can't get his own licence, however, because he can't find a physician to approve its use. The alternative is a prescription drug that makes him lethargic. "What? You have to be terminally ill?" asked Mr. Sweet. The icing on the cake, for him, was a call about two years ago from an official in the office of Allan Rock, then Canada's health minister, looking for information about the hydroponic growing of marijuana for medical users. Here he is providing advice to federal policy makers on how medical users can grow marijuana, helping the same people grow it, needing it himself, running a shop set up with government funds, and getting busted on the side. "I've learned a few things from being in this chair," said Mr. Sweet. "I don't think I'm in the wrong." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens