Pubdate: Sat, 26 Feb 2011 Source: Helena Independent Record (MT) Copyright: 2011 Helena Independent Record Contact: http://helenair.com/app/contact/letters_to_editor/ Website: http://helenair.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1187 Author: Angela Brandt Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?252 (Cannabis - Psychosis) KEY MACGREGOR WITNESS TO TESTIFY MONDAY Jeremy S. MacGregor is set to take the stand Monday morning. The question was raised as to whether MacGregor, who is acting as his own attorney, will therefore question himself. District Court Judge Jeffrey Sherlock said he had only seen that once and although it may have been hilarious when Woody Allen klutzily acted as his own lawyer questioning himself and then bumbling to the stand to answer in the movie "Bananas," it would be too awkward in real life. MacGregor will instead simply be allowed to speak on the stand, Sherlock ruled Friday. MacGregor, 32, is on trial facing two charges of felony attempted deliberate homicide for shooting his then-wife and the couple's nanny in April 2010. While he admits to causing the women to have life-threatening injuries, MacGregor argues that it was under mitigated circumstances because he was involuntarily intoxicated at the time of the shooting after unknowingly eating marijuana cookies. MacGregor was slated to testify Friday but when the time came, he opted to wait until his final witnesses have taken the stand. He has two more potential witnesses, including someone MacGregor says brought the alleged marijuana cookies to a bowling alley the night of the shooting. Those people have been hard to locate, but at least one was contacted on Friday. "Without these witnesses, it'd be impossible for me to prove my whole defense," MacGregor told the judge. "This is the heart of my case. "I know it happened. I know she did bring in these baked goods," he added. MacGregor called seven people who were at the bowling alley that night to testify. All of the witnesses said they did not recall seeing any cookies on MacGregor's table. MacGregor argues that eating the marijuana cookies put him in an altered mental state and due to his involuntary intoxication the shooting was not deliberate. On Friday afternoon, the instructions for the jury were discussed. Although MacGregor has been formally charged with attempted deliberate homicide, the jurors will be given the choice of lesser charges of attempted mitigated homicide and assault with a weapon. In previous testimony in the trial, which began Tuesday, MacGregor's prior use of marijuana has been discussed. He says he began smoking pot at the age of 13 and quit using the drug about two months prior to the shooting. MacGregor called Ron Clevenger, a specialist in illicit drugs from St. Peter's Hospital, to the stand to discuss the effects of marijuana. Clevenger said it is a unique drug that reacts differently to each user. It can be a stimulant or a depressant depending on who you are, how much you use and how you take it. "It has so many different effects on the body," he testified. "It can be totally different per person." According to a test taken the day after the shooting, MacGregor had a "moderate dose" of the drug in his system. That amount, Clevenger said, was likely from a single-time use but chronic users may also have a similar result. Clevenger said he could not say what the impact would be on a habitual user who abstained and then used again. There could be an elevated high due to the prior use or it could have less of an effect. The reaction to the substance would also depend on the type of marijuana and the amount taken, he said. Lewis and Clark County Attorney Leo Gallagher brought up the use of marijuana for medicinal purposes and the number of Montanans who have green cards. "How many of those 2,400 are out there shooting people, as far as you know?" he asked Clevenger, who responded that he didn't know. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom