Pubdate: Fri, 24 Dec 2010 Source: Telegraph-Journal (Saint John, CN NK) Copyright: 2010 Brunswick News Inc. Contact: http://telegraphjournal.canadaeast.com/onsite.php?page=contact Website: http://telegraphjournal.canadaeast.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2878 Author: Bryan Tait JUDGE CONVICTS MEDICINAL POT SMOKER OF POSSESSION Court: Defence calls verdict 'great injustice,' promises to appeal A Hainesville man who argued against the legality of Canada's drug laws and claimed he was permitted to possess marijuana for medicinal purposes was found guilty of possessing the narcotic by a provincial court judge. Todd Terrance LeClair was fined $500 by Chief Judge R. Leslie Jackson after a trial in which the defence argued regulations governing access to medicinal marijuana are unconstitutional because of unreasonable delays in processing applications for permits. LeClair also argued certain sections of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (CDSA) had no force with respect to marijuana because the medical exemption regulations were unconstitutional. LeClair was arrested and charged with possession of marijuana after police executed a search warrant of his residence on Oct. 19, 2009. During the search, police seized 215 grams of bud marijuana and 1,300 grams of marijuana "shake" from the residence. According to testimony from RCMP Cpl. Andy Munro, a small amount of marijuana was sent to Winnipeg for testing to verify it was actually marijuana. Munro said LeClair showed him a prescription for marijuana at the time of the search. LeClair's defence was primarily based on the notion he was permitted to possess marijuana as long as he had a doctor's prescription. When LeClair testified during the trial, he said his doctor had told him if he had the prescription he would be exempt from prosecution. "Nobody told me I wasn't ready to go," LeClair said. LeClair told the court he'd been taking painkillers since a motorcycle accident in 1987. After a fall in 2008, he said a friend let him try marijuana and it seemed to help his condition. According to LeClair, he had never been told the prescription was only to obtain a possession licence through Health Canada and he'd never been given an explanation for the lengthy delay in receiving a licence. LeClair received a licence on Jan. 13, 2010. In a written decision, Judge Jackson said there was no doubt LeClair was in possession of marijuana on Oct. 19, 2009, and LeClair had admitted as much during the trial. Jackson said the constitutionality of the medical exemption regulations was irrelevant to any issue he had to decide. "The issue here is whether the structure set out in the medical marijuana access regulations is manifestly unfair because of the delays in processing times," Jackson wrote in his decision. "LeClair also suggests that the procedure is manifestly unfair as the delays prevent him from having timely access to his 'medicine.' " LeClair had argued if his doctor had issued a prescription for the painkiller Dilaudid, he'd have had access to the medicine in hours instead of weeks or months. Jackson dismissed the argument, noting the document LeClair had been issued wasn't a prescription, but a medical practitioner's declaration and signature to be used in the application process. "No physician can prescribe marijuana as it is a prohibited drug," Jackson wrote. "The declaration is a necessary part of an application for an authorization to possess but is not on its own a legal authorization to possess marijuana." Jackson also addressed the issue of the lengthy delay LeClair claimed he experienced while waiting for his application to be processed. The Crown had called Jeannine Ritchot, director of the Bureau of Medical Cannabis at Health Canada to testify as to the procedures of her organization and the systemic delays in terms of processing the applications. Ritchot told the court there had been a sharp increase in the number of applications received by her organization beginning in September 2009, and by November 2009 it was clear a new trend was being established. She said the operational standard of her organization as far as how long to process an application was eight to 10 weeks, but the large number coming in beginning in the fall of 2009 made it difficult to meet that standard. Ritchot said Health Canada has been taking steps to address the delays and return to their standards. Ritchot also provided the court with a copy of LeClair's application for the exemption. The document was dated March 15, 2009, which was consistent with LeClair's testimony. But Ritchot indicated the application wasn't received by Health Canada until Oct. 23, 2009. Call logs of conversations between LeClair or his girlfriend Judy Jamieson and Health Canada regarding the application process were supplied by Ritchot in an affidavit. According to the logs, LeClair or Jamieson indicated on several occasions the application was mailed in March, May, June or July 2009. "I am satisfied on the evidence before me that the application was, in fact, not mailed in March 2009 and was in all probability not mailed until after the execution of the search warrant on Oct. 19, 2009," Jackson wrote. As for the constitutionality of certain sections of the CDSA, Judge Jackson said he was bound by prior rulings from the New Brunswick Court of Appeal. "Section 4(1) of the Act is valid legislation and has never been repealed," Jackson wrote, referring to the section dealing with possession of illegal drugs. Based on all those factors, LeClair was convicted of the charge. LeClair was fined $500 plus a $75 victim fine surcharge, which must be paid by May 31, 2011. Jamieson, who'd represented LeClair during the proceedings, made it clear she didn't think the verdict was appropriate and vowed to appeal the conviction. She said the verdict sent a message to medicinal marijuana users that Canadian laws don't protect them. "A great injustice has occurred here," Jamieson said outside the courtroom. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt