Pubdate: Tue, 24 Jul 2012 Source: Comox Valley Echo (CN BC) Copyright: 2012 Comox Valley Echo Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/785 Author: Spencer Anderson MEDICINAL POT ADVOCATE CHALLENGING LAWS A Comox Valley medical marijuana advocate is challenging the constitutionality of federal regulations on the substance following police searches and his arrest at his home last year. On Wednesday, Ernie Yacub filed a motion to challenge the constitutionality of sections of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (CDSA) as they apply to cannabis used for medical or therapeutic purposes. Yacub is also seeking the dismissal of two counts of possession for the purpose of trafficking he is faced with under the CDSA. The charges were laid about three months ago, and he has entered not guilty pleas on both. Yacub has been involved with the North Island Compassion Club as a member and also as a manager and director for several years, during which time the club supplied its members with medicinal marijuana products to help them cope with pain and illness. The club operated a dispensary at Yacub's rented home on Sixth Street in Courtenay for seven years without incident, according to Yacub, who said he even informed police of the location of the dispensary. However, police raided the club in February 2011, seizing several pounds of marijuana, and arresting four people. "Police are concerned the club has become a front for marijuana dealing," RCMP spokeswoman Const. Tammy Douglas said in a statement at the time of the incident. "We recognize there are conflicting views on the medicinal value of marijuana but it remains illegal to sell in the manner in which they were conducting business." Police raided the club a second time in July 2011, costing the club thousands of dollars, Yacub said at the time. "After that, we had to shut the dispensary down because we couldn't afford to keep losing money and medicine," Yacub said. At a press conference Thursday, Yacub's lawyer Kirk Tousaw said the CDSA fails to protect people from criminal prosecution for medical marijuana use under the act, and fails to provide patients with a "safe, effective and lawful source of cannabis and cannabis-based medical products." Tousaw said aspects of the federal statute and Marijuana Medical Access Regulations under the act have already been found to be unconstitutional on several other occasions in the past, including in B.C. Supreme Court. He said his client is prepared to take the case to the Supreme Court of Canada if necessary, but noted the highest court in the land has not yet agreed to hear a medical marijuana access case. "We fully expect to demonstrate to the provincial court in Courtenay that the system the federal government has set up continues to be ineffective and continues to deny patients the ability to access this safe and effective natural health product, and we hope that a successful result in this case will finally drive home to the Harper Conservative government that Canadians - critically and chronically ill Canadians - deserve safe, unfettered access to medical marijuana ." Tousaw said. Tousaw called his client a "compassionate" person providing people with health issues a valuable service, and said current and proposed access laws were overly restrictive. "Look, let's be very clear," he said. "Marijuana is a safe and effective natural health product, there is no reported case of overdose in thousands of years of human history, it provides little danger to patients who consume it, and a great deal of benefit." Yacub said he doesn't make any money off of the North Island Compassion Club, and said he runs the club "because it needs to be done." "I welcome the opportunity to inform people that the law is broken, it's wrong," he said. "People have a right to this medicine which does all kinds of amazing, wonderful things for people." Tousaw said the Crown could choose to drop charges against Yacub at any time during proceedings. "These are battles that aren't chosen by the accused, these are battles that are chosen by Crown," he said, adding that Yacub was charged about a year after his arrest and the initial search warrant executed by police. "These raids and these charges have impacted the community in a very negative way, and will continue to impact the community in a negative way until the federal government comes to its senses and puts into place a system of access to medical marijuana that actually works and is actually to the benefit of patients," said Tousaw. Under current access regulations, a person may apply for a license to possess dried medical marijuana, a license to grow marijuana, or a license to have a designated person grow a set quantity of marijuana on their behalf. Health Canada Health provides eligible patients with dried marijuana and seeds obtained from Saskatoon-based Prairie Plant Systems Incorporated, a company that grows, harvests and processes plants for pharmaceutical products and research. The federal government does not license or regulate compassion clubs, Tousaw said. "The unfortunate thing is, on the one hand, you have the federal government saying, 'Well these are illegal, unregulated businesses,' while on the other hand absolutely and categorically refusing to license them and to regulate them," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt