Pubdate: Tue, 09 Sep 2014 Source: Metro (Halifax, CN NS) Copyright: 2014 Metro Canada Contact: http://www.metronews.ca/Halifax Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4727 Author: Ruth Davenport Page: A1 COPS DEFEND THEIR RAID ON MEDICINAL MARIJUANA LOUNGE Two arrests at Farm Assists. Deputy chief says police forces must respond to complaints The deputy chief of Halifax Regional Police says Canadian sentiment around medicinal marijuana may be in flux, but police forces are still required to enforce existing laws. Social-media users erupted after police raided the Farm Assists medical-marijuana lounge on Gottingen Street and two related properties in Head of Chezzetcook on Friday, arresting owner Chris Enns and his fiancee, Sherri Reeve. "This is completely wrong and a GIANT waste of taxpayers money and hrp's time," wrote Anthony Fares on the Metro Halifax Facebook page Saturday. But Deputy Chief Bill Moore said Monday the searches were a response to public complaints - not arbitrary acts of harassment. "If I'm legally allowed to provide medical marijuana with a prescription, you brought in your prescription, I provide you with material," he said. "You come walking through without any prescription and then I sell, that ... is still a trafficking offence." No details on the public complaints that prompted the investigation were available as of Monday evening. Outside court Monday, Reeve called the charges "ridiculous" - though she said giving cannabis away for free could be considered trafficking, even if it's being given to cancer patients. "There is that, whether it's a just law or an unjust law," she said. "I'm sure that Chris' intention is to change the laws in Canada because cannabis is a medicine, whether Health Canada admits it or not." Moore said police use their discretion when enforcing laws, but added that determining public policy and considerations of the "greater good" is best left to the courts. About a dozen supporters came to Halifax provincial court on Monday for the arraignment of a medical marijuana lounge owner, calling the charges against him "sickening" and "despicable." "It's bulls---t," said Farm Assists client Will Jackson. "Once again, another shakedown ... How can you put someone in jail who gives (medication) away?" Chris Enns and fiancee Sherri Reeve were arrested Friday when police searched the Farm Assists location on Gottingen Street, the couple's home and a grow facility in Head of Chezzetcook. Police said they were responding to public complaints, but Reeve and her supporters claimed it was part of a pattern of harassment. "We believe they're attacking Chris because he's giving away free medicine to cancer patients," she said. "We never get to know who those complainants are, (or) what the complaints were." Reeve said she's skeptical of the charges - which include drug production and trafficking - and police investigation, saying only cash was seized from the couple's home, but no cannabis or cannabis extract. "I assume they didn't take it because they knew I had a legal right to possess it," she said. "We weren't over our plant numbers, we didn't have too much on us at the time. I haven't broken any laws." She also said officers seized plants at the couple's legal grow facility, claiming they were too large, though the licence doesn't include any restrictions on size. With Farm Assists out of commission, Reeve said patients who relied on their product have nowhere to turn - a situation client Will Jackson called an "injustice." "We're tough men," he said. "There's people out there that need their medicine that can't come down here and fight for it. So we're here for them, too." Enns, a licensed medical marijuana user, was released from custody Monday, under conditions to not possess, use or produce a controlled substance. He is still able to smoke and grow medical marijuana. He's due back in court on Sept. 29. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt