Pubdate: Thu, 24 Dec 2015 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2015 The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Laura Kane Page: S1 CANADIANS FACING POT CHARGES IN LIMBO, WHILE LIBERALS WORK ON LEGALIZATION While Rose Miranda waits for her April court date to face potential charges of possession for the purpose of trafficking, the 65-year-old retired education assistant can't take cannabis for her arthritis. The RCMP have also banned her from visiting or contacting anyone at Phoenix Pain Management Society, the medical marijuana dispensary where she was volunteering when she was arrested in Nanaimo, B.C. "I love Baby Trudeau, but he says, 'We're going to fix this.' When? Meanwhile, I have clients who don't have their medication," Ms. Miranda said. "I take care of people who are housebound, people in wheelchairs and people who are poor. They need their medication and right now they can't access it." Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has vowed to legalize and regulate marijuana but there is no timeline in sight. Meantime, cannabis-related crimes continue to tie up police and court resources, leaving some feeling as if they're in legal limbo. Ms. Miranda began using medical marijuana about two years ago, she said, after prescription drugs turned her brain into "mush." She began volunteering at Phoenix primarily to educate seniors about cannabis as a pain relief option. Nanaimo RCMP raided three dispensaries, including Phoenix, on Dec. 1. Selling pot over the counter - whether medical or recreational - remains illegal in Canada, and Mounties sent warning letters weeks before executing search warrants. "They came in like a SWAT team, guns out, 'Hands up!,' screaming, yelling, terrifying everybody who was in there," Ms. Miranda said. Constable Gary O'Brien of the Nanaimo RCMP said he couldn't comment directly on any dispensaries that were raided, but officers acted professionally at all times. "I believe most of the scenes were videotaped, so if there's any evidence our police officers were [heavy-handed], that will certainly come out," he said. Constable O'Brien said there is evidence that some stores were selling to minors. Across Canada, charges for cannabis possession and have increased over the past decade. Last year, 24,542 people were charged with marijuana possession, up from 18,953 in 2004. Simon Fraser University criminologist Neil Boyd found in a 2013 study that the Vancouver police rarely recommended charging individuals for cannabis possession as a singular offence, while the RCMP was mostly responsible for a two-fold increase in charges over a decade in B.C. National RCMP spokeswoman Constable Annie Delisle said while the government designs a regime to legalize marijuana, the RCMP is still mandated to enforce current laws. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom