Pubdate: Wed, 20 Jun 2012 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2012 Postmedia Network Inc. Contact: http://www2.canada.com/theprovince/letters.html Website: http://www.theprovince.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Susan Lazaruk SMOKING CUSTODY BATTLE HEATS UP Estranged Wife Accuses Olympic Gold Medallist of Using Pot While Caring for Son Olympic snowboarding gold medallist Ross Rebagliati is in a bitter divorce fight with the mother of their toddler with allegations of his marijuana use at the forefront of a custody battle. Alexandra Rebagliati, 33, a Kelowna real-estate agent, has accused Rebagliati - who was briefly stripped of his 1998 Winter Olympics gold medal after infamously testing positive for marijuana after the race - of smoking pot around their three-year-old son, of whom they share custody, according to an interim agreement in January. Alexandra said in a filed affidavit that after the court ordered Ross not to use illegal drugs while caring for their son, the boy came home from his father's home mimicking Ross's smoking by holding his fist to his mouth and saying, "Look, mommy, I smoking," according to an online report. Alexandra said Ross "smokes marijuana on a daily basis" and that it affects his thinking and "presents a negative role model for the child," according to the custody agreement. The mother even paid to have her son's hair tested for "cannabinoids" at a private clinic and the positive results will likely be used in court to bolster the mom's bid for primary custody. She also said she begged Ross to quit smoking during their seven-year marriage and often threw out his marijuana stash, which he would retrieve from the garbage. Ross, 40, who now lives in Whistler with his new girlfriend, who was pregnant in January, admitted to the court he smokes marijuana "to soothe his painful joints" but not daily. He agreed to comply with the court order but didn't promise to quit using marijuana. His lawyers, Lorne MacLean and Lena Ronak Yousefi, in an email to The Province on Tuesday said, "Mr. Rebagliati will not litigate what is best for the parties' son in the media" but questioned the hair-test results. "Mr. Rebagliati is very concerned about the validity of the alleged test results and is making it a priority to get to the bottom of how his son could have tested positive for low levels of marijuana in or on his hair and the methodology and background to how this test was conducted." Joey Gareri of Motherisk drug-testing lab at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto said a positive result on the test could mean the child is frequently exposed to marijuana smoke by a caregiver or the hair could be contaminated by hand to hair contact. "It has to come from somewhere," he said. When Ross lost the world's first snowboarding Olympic gold med-al after testing positive for marijuana, he denied smoking pot, blaming the results on second-hand expo-sure to marijuana smoke at Whistler parties he attended. The medal was returned to him because marijuana wasn't listed by the Olympics as a banned substance. The nasty battle leading up to the couple's divorce trial date includes an affidavit, received by The Province, from Ross's ex-girlfriend, Jennifer Friesen, alleging he was a "chronic marijuana user," smoking three to four joints a day from 2001 to 2004, when they dated. "Throughout our relationship, Ross could not get out of bed with-out smoking weed to function and he could not sleep at night unless he smoked an entire joint," she said. The judge's interim ruling granted the couple equal access of two weeks each a month, despite the mother's assertion that the child's best interests were served by following a routine at his Kelowna daycare, with periodic access by Ross. He also agreed Alexandra's concern about Ross's marijuana use is "well-founded." "A child should not be placed in circumstances in which the respondent [Ross] regularly breaks Canadian criminal law," he said, and the "intoxicating effect of marijuana" on parenting ability is a concern. But in the end, he ruled he was satisfied Ross is a "caring and capable father to the boy" and that the child can do well with two routines, in Kelowna and Whistler. The couple also were seeking child support from one another. They married in 2004 and separated in 2010. Alexandra made $112,000 in her real-estate career in 2011 and Ross's taxable income in 2010 was $3,500, according to documents. In his ruling, the judge noted that Ross didn't attend the hearing and also noted Alexandra "was unable to contain herself. Her behaviour was disrespectful and disruptive. I will assume that wishing to not participate in or be the target of outbursts from [Alexandra] was at least one of the reasons [Ross] did not attend." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom