Pubdate: Wed, 18 Jul 2007 Source: Chronicle Herald (CN NS) Copyright: 2007 The Halifax Herald Limited Contact: http://thechronicleherald.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/180 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) POT ARREST HIKE WORRIES LAW EXPERTS Court Case Overload Feared, Constitutional Questions Raised TORONTO (CP) - Ottawa needs to fix long-standing loopholes and inconsistencies in Canada's marijuana laws to help the justice system contend with a surge of court cases resulting from the Conservative government's new zeal for enforcement, legal experts say. With witnesses reporting a dramatic increase in the number of possession cases before the courts, those familiar with the intricacies of the law say it remains vulnerable to the argument that Canada's medicinal marijuana program renders it unconstitutional. "Everytime a judge calls into question our marijuana laws, it undercuts the legitimacy of the law," said Alan Young, a Osgoode Hall law professor and veteran of the long-standing debate about marijuana, its medicinal benefits and decriminalizing its possession. Four years after Ottawa supposedly closed off a complex legal loophole that effectively rendered the law unenforceable, an Ontario Court judge agreed Friday that the law governing pot possession in Canada was unconstitutional. The Liberal government's decision in 2003 to allow eligible patients access to marijuana for medicinal reasons was made by an informal policy statement and never changed the existing statutes or regulations, Lawyer Bryan McAllister argued. "It is a departmental policy that can be changed at whim, or even ignored," McAllister said in an interview. "An aggrieved party cannot go to court to seek enforcement of a government policy." Without a clause that makes an exception for medicinal marijuana users, "the policy is not enshrined in law, it has no value, and the law as it stands is unconstitutional," McAllister said. Ontario Court Justice Howard Borenstein agreed and dropped the charges against Clifford Lond, 29, a Toronto resident who was charged with possessing 3.5 grams of pot. Borenstein said he would wait two weeks to make a formal ruling, giving public prosecutors time to file an appeal. Eric Nash, who has testified as an expert witness in a number of cannabis cases across Canada, said the number of cases he has been involved in has "tripled" in recent months. "All of the sudden there seems to be a huge increase in the number of marijuana possession cases going to court," Nash said. That's because the number of people arrested for smoking pot rose dramatically in several Canadian cities last year after the Conservatives took office and killed Liberal legislation to decriminalize small amounts of marijuana. Preliminary figures suggested the number of arrests jumped by more than one-third in several Canadian cities; Toronto, Vancouver, Ottawa and Halifax all reported increases of between 20 and 50 per cent in 2006. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom