Pubdate: Thu, 30 Sep 2004 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2004, The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Ingrid Peritz JUDGE BLAMES POT IN FATAL STABBING MONTREAL -- Marijuana, a drug viewed as so harmless that Canada is moving to decriminalize possessing it, is being blamed for driving a Quebec man to stab his roommate to death in a paranoid rage. A Quebec Superior Court judge imposed an eight-year prison sentence yesterday on Martin Veilleux for an unhinged and unprovoked attack on his friend last March. "I think it's useful to emphasize that in this specific case, the marijuana consumed by Veilleux on March 4 and 5, 2003, was at the very least the catalyst that led him to commit a thoughtless and devastating act," Mr. Justice Gilles Hebert said in his ruling. Usually described in terms such as mellow and laid back, marijuana received a contrasting assessment from medical experts cited in the case. They said pot bought on the streets these days is often sprinkled with the psychedelic drug phencyclidine, or PCP. Further, the pot that Mr. Veilleux ingested may have also had a high concentration of THC, marijuana's active ingredient. Whatever was in it, the drug made Mr. Veilleux paranoid, aggressive and irritable, psychiatrist Louis Morissette concluded in a report submitted to the court. The questionable composition prompted a withering critique by Judge Hebert. "What terms, what words, what vocabulary must we use to sensitize the public to the sometimes unpredictable consequences of the consumption of marijuana or other drugs whose contents, composition and THC content are completely unknown?" Mr. Veilleux, 31, is no stranger to drug use. Starting with glue sniffing at age 9, he is a lifelong substance abuser and has undergone eight detox treatments and numerous psychiatric sessions. His drug-laced history prompted a national marijuana proponent to express disappointment at Judge Hebert's ruling linking the death, which occurred on Montreal's South Shore, to pot. "It sounds like we're back in the age of Reefer Madness," Marc-Boris St.-Maurice, leader of the federal Marijuana Party, said referring to the classic anti-pot film. He said the problem of the doubtful content of marijuana could be solved if the substance were legalized and given proper Health Canada labelling. "Marijuana is one of the safest drugs being used today. It is top of the list -- safer than alcohol, tobacco, cocaine and maybe safer than coffee for all we know," he said. Mr. Veilleux's marijuana use became a mitigating factor in his punishment. The 31-year-old was originally charged with second-degree murder, but pleaded guilty to a reduced charge of manslaughter after a plea bargain. Crown prosecutor Claude Labrecque said in an interview that, given Mr. Veilleux's drug-induced state, convincing a jury that he intended to murder his friend would have been difficult. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh