Pubdate: Sat, 28 Dec 2002 Source: Saturday Okanagan, The (CN BC) Page A6 Copyright: 2002 Saturday Okanagan Contact: http://www.ok.bc.ca Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1206 Author: The Canadian Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) JUDGE TO RULE ON VALIDITY OF FEDERAL MARIJUANA LAWS Crown Claims Possession Is A Crime Except With Medical Authorization Windsor, Ont. - An Ontario judge says he will rule next week on the question of whether Canada's laws that make it illegal to possess small amounts of marijuana are invalid. Ontario Court Justice Douglas Phillips said he will have a decision Jan. 2 in the case of a 16-year-old youth who was charged in April with possession of marijuana. Phillips heard legal arguments Friday by lawyer Brian McAllister, who is representing the youth, and federal drug prosecutor Ed Posliff. McAllister brought forward an application to have the drug charges dropped, asserting the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act no longer prohibits the simple possession of marijuana by virtue of an earlier decision in the Ontario Court of Appeal. In that case, the appeal court struck down the federal law prohibiting the possession of less than 30 grams of marijuana. The court found in the case of Terry Parker of Toronto that the law violated the rights of sick people who use marijuana for medical reasons. It declared the law invalid, but it suspended the declaration of invalidity for a year to allow the government time to revamp the law and correct the problem. In response, the federal government passed the Marijuana Medical Access Regulations, which allow marijuana use for medical reasons under certain circumstances. But McAllister said that wasn't enough. He said it was incumbent on Parliament to re-enact the marijuana possession section in the drug law once the new regulation was in effect. Without that action, there is no valid law, McAllister argued, because the appeal court ruled it to be invalid. The Crown doesn't see it that way. "Our position is it continues to be a crime to possess marijuana except if you have proper medical authorization," Posliff said. Posliff argued the law still stands, despite McAllister's assertion that Parliament needed to re-enact the law. "Only Parliament can repeal its own acts," Posliff said. "A court cannot repeal an act of Parliament. All it can say is, if it offends the constitution or the charter, it's of no force or effect. But the section still remains." Because Parliament addressed the question of medical use through a separate regulation, nothing else needed to be done to the section in the drug act dealing with marijuana possession, Posliff said. If Phillips rules in his favour, McAllister said the decision will not be binding on other courts. But "it would have a persuasive affect. It would be open to anybody else to make the same argument in another court." McAllister's client, who can't be identified because of his age, was charged with possessing less than 30 grams of marijuana when he was stopped by police in Kingsville, Ont. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager