Pubdate: Mon, 05 Oct 2015 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2015 Postmedia Network Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Ian Mulgrew Page: A1 MEDICAL MARIJUANA: OK FOR JUDGES, LAWYERS, JURIES? Side effects: No rules require disclosure when they toke up during a trial The B.C. Supreme Courthouse was abuzz - jurors getting high? Lawyers grabbing a toke? Judges mellowing out? Vancouver's downtown glass ziggurat of justice might look like an oversized greenhouse, but pot friendly? Now that medical marijuana is the talk of the town, with dispensaries as popular as coffee shops and two mainstream political parties willing to let people spark up their bongs, the potential side-effects are becoming more obvious. What do you do with a juror who has a medical prescription for dope and insists on using his or her medication during deliberations? How would you know unless they lit up a doobie in the jury room? Are we now entitled to an addled panel of our peers? Similarly, should you have a right to know if your lawyer is playing the Big Lebowski with his prescription, chewing pot cookies for his arthritis while negotiating your personal injury claim? Come on, man, it's a great offer! How about handling your criminal charge? Hey, time is elastic - don't be so bummed out. What about judges relieving the stress and anxiety of a complicated trial with a little hash oil before writing their judgment? Relax. Don't worry. Be happy! With Vancouver city council, other municipalities and B.C.'s pot consuming public racing ahead of federal law and public policy, the problematic consequences of badly regulated and unregulated cannabis consumption is an elephant in the room. I asked the Law Society of B.C. about rules governing medical marijuana use by lawyers and the discussion within the profession about rules and guidelines for judges, lawyers, jurors and others active in the administration of justice. "The Law Society has no specific rules or guidance with respect to the use of medical marijuana, but it would be no different than for any other drug legally prescribed for a medical condition," said David Jordan, communications officer for the society. "Generally, there is no obligation to reveal a medical condition to the courts or to a regulator." Hmmm, does that sound like a profession with its head in the sand? No different than any other prescription drug and medical condition - I think the law society forgot the nudge, nudge, wink, wink! Unlike a pharmaceutical product with known side effects, specific dosage recommendations, supporting medical research and literature, the weed poses a huge problem for doctors and they have been vocal about it. Cannabis is a plant whose multiple strains contain various compounds and chemicals whose effects vary depending on the amount consumed and the manner in which it is consumed or administered. Its therapeutic benefits are only beginning to be understood. This is not Valium. On Friday, B.C. Supreme Court Associate Chief Justice Austin Cullen gave one person permission to possess roughly two kilos for personal use, another permission for a half-kilo. It's material for another Arlo Guthrie song: "Comin' into the registry, bringing in a couple of keys!" Still, Neil MacKenzie, communications counsel for the criminal justice branch, reassured me about what he called the "hypothetical use of medical marijuana by prosecutors." "To the best of my knowledge this is not an issue which the branch has had to address up to this point," he said. Whew! Although I think that means no prosecutor has admitted to having a prescription or been caught in tie-dye. The feds, who prosecute all the drug charges and all the medical constitutional cases in court, assumed the same ostrich position. The Public Prosecution Service said they don't have a policy that "specifically addresses the consumption of marijuana pursuant to a Health Canada authorization." Judges only talk through their decisions so we'll have to wait until one of them starts quoting Bob Marley - or tries to install a big fan in his or her chambers like one of the last tobacco addicts on the bench. As for jurors, B.C. Justice Minister Suzanne Anton's minions assured me: "While there is no existing policy on medical marijuana use for jurors in B.C., it is something that is on the ministry's radar for discussions in the future." Relax, don't worry, be happy! Your legal system is in good hands, straight hands. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt