Pubdate: Wed, 08 Oct 2003
Source: London Free Press (CN ON)
Copyright: 2003 The London Free Press a division of Sun Media Corporation.
Contact:  http://www.lfpress.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/243
Author: Gillian Livingston, Canadian Press
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

POT ILLEGAL AGAIN

TORONTO -- Possessing small amounts of pot is illegal again in Ontario 
after an appeal court ruling yesterday struck down parts of Ottawa's 
medicinal marijuana program. In striking provisions it deemed 
unconstitutional, the Ontario Court of Appeal sealed a legal loophole 
opened in January that had rendered Canada's pot-possession laws all but 
unenforceable.

"That little gap that we had in Ontario where the law did not exist and 
police could not arrest you for smoking (marijuana) is over," lawyer Alan 
Young said outside court.

The court upheld an Ontario Superior Court ruling that patients who 
qualified under the program were unfairly restricted in obtaining a safe, 
legal supply of the drug.

But it stopped short of the remedy many marijuana advocates had hoped for: 
striking down the law in its entirety.

Instead, the three-judge panel struck down specific provisions of the 
federal Marijuana Medical Access Regulations to restore the plan's 
constitutionality.

Those provisions restricted licensed growers from receiving compensation 
for their product, growing the drug for more than one qualified patient and 
pooling resources with other licensed producers.

It also struck down a requirement that sick people get two doctors to 
validate their need to use pot as a drug.

The appeal court agreed with a lower court ruling in January that deemed 
the government's regulations unconstitutional because they forced 
participants either to grow their own pot or buy it on the black market.

"The interests of justice are best served by removing any uncertainty as to 
the constitutionality of the possession prohibition, while at the same time 
providing for a constitutionally acceptable medical exemption," the 
three-judge panel said in a written decision.

"The law did not exist in the past several months because of problems with 
the medical program," Young explained. "(Yesterday), the court fixed the 
problems with the medical program, so if the medical program is operating 
constitutionally, then the criminal law also operates constitutionally."

Warren Hitzig, founder of the Toronto Compassion Centre, which provides 
patients access to marijuana to ease their symptoms, said the changes could 
result in fewer restrictions on such facilities.

"For the centres, it puts us in a very good position," Hitzig said. "The 
government has run out of many options and this opens up the door . . . 
(for the centres) to have licences to distribute out the marijuana."

Toronto and provincial police officials refused to comment on the decision, 
saying it was still under review.

In Ottawa, Health Minister Anne McLellan said she and Justice Minister 
Martin Cauchon will review the judgment and "determine how we're going to 
move forward."

McLellan said she was pleased the court approved of the interim policy 
Ottawa introduced in July of supplying marijuana to qualified applicants to 
get around the constitutional issue.

The fact the law remained standing left some medicinal marijuana advocates 
celebrating only a partial victory.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom