Pubdate: Mon, 07 Apr 2014 Source: Regina Leader-Post (CN SN) Page: A5 Copyright: 2014 The Leader-Post Ltd. Contact: http://www.leaderpost.com/opinion/letters/letters-to-the-editor.html Website: http://www.leaderpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/361 Author: Douglas Quan SECOND SHIPMENT SEIZED AT SAME AIRPORT, SAME DAY Another member of Canada's fledgling medical-marijuana industry had a shipment of pot products seized at a B.C. airport last week. Toronto-based Mettrum Ltd., had acquired medical marijuana products from growers in B.C. and planned to transport those products to Ontario last Monday, spokesman Keelan Green told Postmedia News on Sunday. Federal regulators with Health Canada had signed off on the transaction, Green said. "We don't do anything without Health Canada approval." Yet, for reasons that have not been made clear to the company, RCMP officials seized the products at the Kelowna International Airport. Green said the company isn't overly upset about the seizure - it's just a "bit of a delay" and "one of those things," he said, chalking it up to confusion over the transition from the old regulatory regime to the new one. "We don't foresee a problem. ... The RCMP is doing their job. Health Canada is doing their job," he said. Green said it was "coincidence" that a competitor, Tweed Marijuana Inc., of Smiths Falls, Ont., had a shipment of medical-marijuana products seized the same day at the same airport. The company - the first publicly traded medical pot company in Canada - felt it had done everything "absolutely correctly" and had invited the Mounties to inspect the shipment, Tweed chairman Bruce Linton said Friday. RCMP officials did not respond to a request Sunday for comment. On Friday, B.C. spokesman Sgt. Duncan Pound said police typically do not confirm or deny investigations unless there is a specific need or until charges are laid. Chuck Doucette, a retired RCMP investigator specializing in drug crimes, said Sunday he had no knowledge of the cases but speculated that the Mounties could be checking the backgrounds of the B.C. growers who sold products to the new commercial producers. Under the old regulatory regime, licence holders were allowed to grow small amounts of pot in their basements or use designated growers, but authorities complained that they often grew more than they were permitted and that the system was rife with abuse. Before the April 1 switch to the new regulatory regime, which restricts production to commercial growers, people who-had-personal-production licences were allowed to sell their "starting materials," such as seeds and plants, to one of the new commercial producers as long as Health Canada approved the transactions. Mettrum, one of 12 commercial producers now licensed in Canada, decided to acquire products from B.C. growers because the company was "forecasting an increase in demand" and wanted to be sure it could meet demand, Green said Sunday. He declined to say how much product the company intended to import from B.C. Green said the company's CEO, Michael Haines, was present at the Kelowna airport when the RCMP inspection took place. Haines was unavailable for comment Sunday, Green said. Tweed's chairman said last week that unexpected demand prompted his company to turn to B.C. growers for an additional 55 varieties of marijuana. The transition to the new regulatory regime was complicated last month when a Federal Court judge granted an injunction for medical marijuana users who had previously held a personal-production licence. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D