Pubdate: Fri, 11 Jan 2008 Source: Edmonton Sun (CN AB) Copyright: 2008 Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.edmontonsun.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/135 Author: Lyn Cockburn Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?241 (Methamphetamine - Canada) METH AND BADNESS Sandra Bergen was introduced to crystal meth at the age of 13. She became an addict, stopped using for eight months and just before her 20th birthday, she went to a party and later took some meth. She had a heart attack, ended up in a coma for 11 days and nearly died. In both cases, the same acquaintance offered her the meth. That's the sad and bad part. Now 23, the young woman from Biggar, Sask., is clean and sober, runs a website to help others get off drugs and visits schools to speak to kids about the dangers of drugs. That's the good part. Here's the questionable part. She's suing her drug dealer, whom she has evidently known since nursery school. According to Bergen, Clinton Davey got her addicted to crystal meth by offering her a free sample, a time-honoured sales pitch for everything from perfume to pizza. Note that Davey must have also been around 13 at the time, a fact that makes him a victim, initially. They were both around 20 when they met again at that party and he again offered her some meth and she again accepted. By that time, it was a little too late for either of them to stand under the victim banner. It seems that Bergen has won her case, largely because Davey, who denied all charges, suddenly stopped contesting the lawsuit when he was ordered to name his supplier. No kidding. Small-time drug dealers are likely to end up dead on those rare occasions when they rat out Mr. Big. Or even Mr. Medium. So Bergen may indeed be awarded the more than $50,000 she's asking for, although she says she's not after money - a good thing since Davey, a man of no fixed address, may not have any. Instead, she wants to send a message to drug dealers that they'll get hit in the pocket if they keep peddling the stuff. And referring to the damages which will be decided at a future hearing, she said: "But I do know of one family that's awaiting the verdict on this case so they can go ahead with a similar one and find a lawyer to take it on." This is indeed a case that could lead to any number of similar lawsuits across Canada. In fact, Bergen's lawyer, Stuart Busse, says he's already spoken to a woman from Nova Scotia who'd like to sue the drug dealer responsible for her son's overdose. And that's the question. Do we want to spend time suing penny ante drug dealers while the big guys sit in their penthouses laughing? Or do we want to put all our resources into education, into stopping the drug lords? This controversy is comparable to the one over responsibility for drinking and driving. And who's responsible for the lung cancer people get either from smoking or breathing in second-hand smoke? Remember the tragic impaired driving case in 1999 when Desmond Desormeaux left an Ottawa New Year's Eve party dead drunk, got in his car and crashed head-on into a car, killing a young man and turning Zoe Childs into a paraplegic? The Supreme Court of Canada ruled in 2006 that Childs could not sue the hosts of the party. Desormeaux was jailed in 2000 for 10 years. As for the effective use of education as a means of combatting smoking, take a look at the scientific evidence which has led to the outlawing of lighting up in all public places in many countries. Including France, where smoking until very recently, was almost a religion. In the end, Bergen may be doing far more good through her anti-drug website and her speaking engagements at local high schools than through her lawsuit. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom