Pubdate: Fri, 12 Mar 2004 Source: Daily News, The (CN NS) Copyright: 2004 The Daily News Contact: http://www.hfxnews.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/179 Author: Rachel Boomer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/michael+patriquen POT ACTIVIST CLAIMS PRISON INFECTION Dartmouth - He may be out of prison, but pot activist Michael Patriquen says his troubles are far from over. On his first day at the Springhill federal penitentiary, Patriquen claims he got hepatitis C while trying to clean up a bloodstained holding cell filled with leftover razors and tattoo needles from a previous inmate. For months, he says, he was in pain, losing weight and denied access to doctors who could diagnose him. Now that he's out, he plans to eventually sue Corrections Canada over the conditions he believes led to his infection. "I'm looking at calling the government to task for what they've done to my health," Patriquen said yesterday. Patriquen, 50, was sentenced in September 2002 to six years for conspiring to traffic pot in Nova Scotia and Newfoundland. The former Marijuana Party candidate has a federal exemption to smoke marijuana for the pain caused by nerve damage from a 1999 accident, but Corrections Canada wouldn't let him ingest pot in jail. He was released from prison Tuesday after 21/2 years, and is now living at a Dartmouth halfway house run by the Salvation Army, which allows him to take marijuana so long as he does it outside. Patriquen said by Halloween 2002, he was weak and rapidly losing weight. "I was down about 50 pounds and still declining. My joints burned. I had to have help getting around - I was literally falling down," Patriquen said. Protein supplements helped him regain nine pounds, he said. "Every day, I was sick and in pain. (Jail is) certainly no place for someone who's ill." Hepatitis C can cause cirrhosis of the liver, liver cancer and liver failure. It's passed by contact with infected blood, such as sharing infected drug or tattoo needles, or using a toothbrush or razor with infected blood on it, according to the U.S.-based Centers for Disease Control. Patriquen said cleaning the holding cell without rubber gloves is the only way he can think of that he might have picked up the virus. Correctional Service Canada spokesman Ed Muise said the policy in prison is for trained cleaners wearing protective gear to clean blood spills in cells, not to let unprotected inmates do it. But Muise admitted hepatitis C rates are much higher in prison - 24.6 per cent of federal inmates, or 3,241 individuals, have the disease compared to 0.8 per cent of the Canadian population. Patriquen has challenged Ottawa's policy of not allowing medical marijuana in jail, but he said it's now a "moot point" that he may not pursue. He and his wife, Melanie Stephen-Patriquen, plan to fight to have marijuana decriminalized by joining their local NDP riding association. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin