Pubdate: Fri, 27 Mar 2015 Source: National Post (Canada) Copyright: 2015 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/wEtbT4yU Website: http://www.nationalpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286 Author: Christie Blatchford Page: A5 LISI: STRANGE DRUG CASE ON A MERRY RIDE Dry Cleaner Had Legal Right to Possess Pot Probably the strangest little drug-trafficking case going on in the whole country continued its merry way Thursday, with the revelation that an alleged marijuana dealer was in fact licensed to possess, grow and store - guess what? - medical marijuana. This is the weed trial of Alexander (Sandro) Lisi and a mild-mannered Etobicoke dry cleaner named Jamshid Bahrami. The two are arguably on trial only because they were unlucky enough to be connected to the most dangerous rotund white man in Canada, the former Toronto mayor, Rob Ford. Mr. Lisi was Mr. Ford's friend, occasional chauffeur and purported connection; Mr. Bahrami owned the dry cleaners in the strip mall Mr. Ford favoured. "Were you aware that Mr. Bahrami had a medical marijuana possession licence? That he could legally possess 1,800 grams, which is about four pounds?" Mr. Bahrami's lawyer, Jacob Stilman, asked the Toronto Police undercover agent Det. Ross Fernandes, who in August and September of 2013 was avidly courting Mr. Bahrami. "No," said Det. Fernandes. "That was known [by Toronto Police] by mid-July," Mr. Stilman sputtered, "and no one told you that? "That he [Mr. Bahrami] had a designated grow licence? That he could store 15 kilograms?" "No," Det. Fernandes said. "No." The two men came to the attention of Toronto Police because by that summer, Mr. Ford's infamous video, in which he smoked crack cocaine, was public, as was his penchant for hanging with low-level disreputable persons, and he was under investigation for suspected criminality. In the end - after a whopping investigation that involved GPS trackers, wiretaps, body packs, aerial surveillance and God knows how many cops and man-hours - Mr. Ford was never charged criminally. Only Mr. Bahrami, now 49, and Mr. Lisi, now 36, and two other small-fish dealers were ever arrested. Mr. Bahrami suffers from severe, chronic and debilitating rheumatoid arthritis, which is why he had a licence to smoke medical weed. He limps noticeably, and can often be spotted in the halls of the Old City Hall courts leaning against and into a wall. Though he appears to be in almost constant pain, he is unfailingly courteous and pleasant, and, as Det. Fernandes acknowledged during a particularly sarcastic part of Mr. Stilman's cross, when he was suggesting that Mr. Bahrami saw the agent as a friend, "Was Mr. Bahrami a nice man? Absolutely." Under Mr. Stilman's questioning, in fact, Det. Bahrami admitted that in his six weeks of working Mr. Bahrami, during which the two spent between 10 and 15 hours together, he never saw the dry cleaner sell a single doobie. "How many drug deals did you observe?" Mr. Stilman asked. "None, right?" "Just the one," the agent replied. But, Mr. Stilman pointed out, that was an exchange where Mr. Bahrami bought - not sold - a small amount of marijuana from a man named Dan. "There was no procession of dubious characters in and out of Mr. Bahrami's store, was there?" the lawyer asked. "None that I can think of," Det. Fernandes replied. In fact, the agent agreed that in his weeks as the undercover operative for the sprawling police Project Brazen 2, the result was a bust of 1.5 pounds of marijuana purchased. "It's safe to say this operation was not like any other you've been involved in ... in scope and scale for 1.5 pounds and .777 grams [a sample Mr. Bahrami gave the agent from his own personal stash]?" "Yes," said Det. Fernandes. He and his five-member team from the drug squad were told at first only that Mr. Bahrami was the target - and weren't informed that he was a legal medical marijuana user. Only later, the agent said, did he learn that Mr. Lisi - upon whom he never clamped eyes or spoke - was also a target. And it appears he was never fully informed that the operation was actually focused on Mr. Ford. On the wiretaps that secretly recorded many of the conversations Det. Fernandes had with Mr. Bahrami, and which have been played for Ontario Court Judge Ramez Khawly, two things are quite clear. The first is that Mr. Bahrami appeared a lonely and trusting man, who accepted Det. Fernandes as the low-level dealer he was pretending to be, and tried to befriend him. Twice, he even had the agent drive him to pick up his little boy. But the second is more germane - as Mr. Stilman put it once: "So far, we have a suspected marijuana dealer with no weed to sell and he's asking you to find a grower for him?" - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom