Pubdate: Thu, 12 May 2005 Source: here (Saint John, CN NK) Copyright: 2005, here publishing inc. Contact: http://www.heresj.com/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmjcn.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal - Canada) UP IN SMOKE Lynn Wood Awaits Sentencing on Trafficking Charge After Cannabis Cafe Closure. Local Compassion Club Members Left Out in the Cold When you're a florist, not everything is bound to come up roses. Just ask Allen Merritt. The 25-year year veteran of the floral industry has had more than his fair share of misfortune - though he'd probably talk about most of it with a crooked smile on his face, and enough laughs to make you smile with him. His heavy head of black curls shaking back and forth, the cane-carrying man is full of stories and ambition. Having battled with HIV for close to 18 years, Merritt has lived through bouts of disease and poverty in good humour, though his blue eyes darken as he describes his arrest at the Cannabis Caf? back in 2003. Levelling his dark brows, Merritt visibly shakes as he thinks back about his experience. Charged with drug possession while waiting for his medical grant for marijuana use, Merritt was arrested at the caf? and removed from the site in his wheelchair. When asked why the public hadn't heard the verdict of his trial, Merritt broke out into a laugh. "Neither have I," said Merritt, who never received a trial date for the charge put forth by the Saint John Police. "The lawyer charged me 150 bucks and that's the last [I heard of it]." Shortly after his arrest, Merritt received his medical grant freeing him to use marijuana to treat symptoms of his condition. Continuing to use the Cannabis Caf? as a location to supply him with clean, well-documented medicine, Merritt regarded the club as a location where he felt safe. Merritt was one of over 150 members of the Cannabis Caf? left out in the cold when it closed its doors three weeks ago, almost exactly a year after the drug bust that lead to owner Lynn Wood's drug trafficking conviction. Wood, who had been anticipating sentencing on May 12, closed the caf? to focus on her family and herself just prior to the judge's final verdict. "I thought it was a very noble thing that Linda and Jim would do," said Merritt, discussing the two owners' decision to open the compassion club to the cannabis using community of Saint John. Modelled after compassion clubs in Montreal and Toronto, the Cannabis Caf? had statutory disclaimers stating that those who used marijuana on site had medical permission to do so - and a doctor's signature and confirmation to back this up before they were able to purchase marijuana from the caf?. "There is a need for this service," said Merritt. "A lot of people use marijuana and need a [safe supplier]." Now working with a designated grower, Merritt is able to supply himself with clean and reliable medication, and is comfortable despite the club's closure. However, not all are in his situation. "I believe that [being a compassionate club] was what [Wood] was trying to set up," said Merritt. "But then again Lynn and Jim are more in the cannabis pop culture. I approach Cannabis from a medicinal perspective." Lynn Wood understands her uncertain future with uncanny clarity. The mother of three - currently expecting her fourth - has been awaiting sentencing on her trafficking conviction for close to three months. Her sentencing, anticipated for May 12, has been delayed again, putting her life and the life of her family on hold. Wood explained that she has had city inspectors of every sort try to shut her down in almost every location that the Cannabis Caf? has set up in Saint John since it opened. Having been forced to move their shop five times, Wood says it was never her intention to put the caf? next to the branch police office on Canterbury Street - but simply a matter of necessity. "We basically had to find another spot after 86 King Street, and that proved virtually impossible," said Wood. "We had all kinds of excuses - - one landlord said it was against his religion. Finally someone was desperate enough for money, and we moved in across from police station." Since the April 23, 2004, bust at the Cannabis Caf? leading to her trafficking trial, Wood has understood that her quality of life, her business, and her family have been up in the air. "It's been a lot to deal with between the trial, the pregnancy, and the closing of our business," said Wood, obviously torn about the recent decision to close the caf?. "It was our source of income, our whole life." According to the trial record, on the day of the bust an undercover police officer entered Wood's establishment and obtained a statutory disclaimer from caf? employee Dane Richards. The peace officer then went offsite with the form, which was filled out with erroneous information, and the officer returned. Richards, according to his testimony, called the doctor's office listed on the form, and spoke with what he thought was a registered medical doctor. The contrived office number was answered - and the person at the end of the line then claimed to be a doctor who had given the undercover officer medical permission to use marijuana as treatment for his condition. After this, Richards sold the peace officer marijuana, and Wood as owner of the establishment was then charged with trafficking. Woods' attorney, Rick Northrup, was unable to find fully legal grounds for an entrapment defence. Instead, he put forward a defence on the grounds of the caf? being an active compassion club. This was thrown out by the trial judge due to two factors, the presence of underage members, and two possible sources of profitable income - the marijuana itself, and the store merchandise which was sold on site. "I had no choice but to run [the club] out of my store," said Wood, who had thousands of dollars in legal merchandise seized and not returned after the conclusion of the trial, the majority of which was not used as evidence. "I'm only one person." Wood also defends the cost of the marijuana sold from her caf?, which an RCMP drug trafficking and packaging distribution expert testifying that the location found itself outside of range of profitability. "Our prices were about half of the regular street value," said Jim Wood, Lynn's husband. "The RCMP specialist testified that our business was in no way a standard drug operation. In a standard drug operation your picture isn't taken and you don't have to fill out an application form." Finally, in defence of her underage member, Wood pleads ignorant. The minor, who went on record during the trial, testified to having lied about his age in order to obtain membership at the compassion club. "We're waiting for sentencing before we think about the appeal," said Wood. "I didn't come this far to be thought of as a criminal, but that's the way the judge and prosecution portrayed me." With the trial up in the air and compassion club members currently without a venue, marijuana advocate and user Allen Merritt isn't surprised with what he regards as an unfortunate outcome for Saint John. "When you remove all personal things from it, a law was broken," said Merritt. "In this society that we live in, if you break a law, and are charged and convicted you have to be punished. That's why we have judges." Merritt thinks that forward thinkers like the Woods may have been ahead of their time. But he hopes that in the not too distant future the Cannabis Caf? or a location like it will be opening its doors to the community again. "Saint John's not ready for a cannabis caf?," said Merrit, "but we're getting warmer." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake