Pubdate: Fri, 14 Oct 2016 Source: Montreal Gazette (CN QU) Copyright: 2016 Postmedia Network Inc. Contact: http://www.montrealgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/274 Author: Christopher Curtis Page: A1 NEED MEDICAL MARIJUANA? ASK FOR BORIS Dispensary works in 'legal grey zone' awaiting new federal law The smell is unmistakable. There must be a small mountain of pot lying somewhere in a back room of the storefront office on St-Laurent Blvd. That thick, skunky aroma - strong enough to trigger memories of a misspent youth - is apparent the moment patients are buzzed through the front door of Fondation Marijuana. A whiteboard by the reception desk advertises strains with names like Grand Daddy Purps, Jean Guy and Blue Magic. Despite the overwhelming smell, despite the fact that there are untold kilos of cannabis stored behind the sheetrock wall, the office has a distinctly sterile feel to it: medical forms, filing cabinets, a photocopier and two security cameras pointed toward the centre of the room. This storefront on Montreal's iconic main drag is one of the few places in Quebec where a person can legally buy cannabis. That is, until the Trudeau government's proposal to legalize marijuana takes effect. Last July, federal Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould announced a task force to legalize marijuana - a process legal experts say could take years, even under the best circumstances. In the meantime, one way to buy weed without risking arrest is to get a doctor's prescription, schlep up St-Laurent, and ask for Boris. Marc-Boris St-Maurice emerges from Fondation Marijuana's back room sporting a ruffled dress shirt and a pair of Ray-Bans that rest atop his thinning crop of hair. People started calling him "Boris" while St-Maurice played bass for Grimskunk - a staple of Quebec's punk scene in the 1990s - but the moniker stuck as he moved from punk rock to the rough-and-tumble world of politics. It's difficult to talk about legalizing marijuana in Canada without "Boris" St-Maurice's name coming up. He founded the federal Bloc Pot party in 1998 (you can probably guess what its platform was), ran unsuccessfully for Montreal city council in 2009, has been an active member of the Liberal Party of Canada for the last decade and registered as a lobbyist this year. Lately, he's been lobbying the city administration in the hope that it might help regulate medicinal marijuana dispensaries in Montreal. His cause, he says, "isn't high on their list of priorities." Asked if his pleas have gained traction among the federal Liberals or earned him an audience with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, St-Maurice's face lights up. "Have I met with Justin? Quite frequently," says St-Maurice, who sat down with the Montreal Gazette at a cafe near his dispensary. "He knows me by my first name. I saw him in those conventions 10 years ago, when he started in politics, we would run into each other all the time and debate it. At first he was hesitant, he wasn't sure, but over time he got better educated and now I'm relieved that he finally realizes it's a good policy for Canada. "I like to think that our work helped nudge the Liberal government toward their stance on legalization." For 17 years, St-Maurice has acted as a go-between for people with a legitimate medical right to marijuana and those who break the law to grow cannabis and supply patients with that product. "We're straight up: people need it, we're going to get it for them," St-Maurice says. "It's an act of civil disobedience because we're breaking the law to get it to them. It's nice to see the social climate has caught up to what we're doing." By his reckoning, St-Maurice operates in a "legal grey zone." Though there's one licensed producer of medical marijuana in Quebec - Hydropothecary, an 80-acre farm near Gatineau - St-Maurice says that isn't enough to meet his clients' needs. So he also deals with people who operate outside the law. "Of course there is a criminal element out there, but there are also many, many, if not the majority of these, (who are) mom-and-pop producers who have small-to medium-level productions," St-Maurice says. "And they're maybe making $20,000 a year, maybe $100,000, but you know that's not Al Capone by any stretch. "People have this thought, you know, they watch the news and see a bust that's worth '$3 million.' I talk to the people who run that house and they say, 'Man, if that's worth $3 million I would have retired to the Bahamas years ago.'" Criminal groups have long played a role in the industry. They provide cash for grow-ops, oversee distribution and extort protection money from producers. But St-Maurice says it's labourers and farmers who form the backbone of Quebec's illegal marijuana trade, experiencing the time-honoured trials of running an agricultural business: crop failures and cost fluctuations. Many of those "mom and pop" operators, he says, need to have a place at the table when recreational marijuana becomes a legitimate business. "There's a lot of expertise there, a lot of talent and brain trust you'd be throwing away if you didn't include these people," said St-Maurice. "Regulation will probably make the industry a lot less attractive to criminals and that's a good thing." The patients who come to Fondation Marijuana suffer from a variety of debilitating conditions: they are in the advanced stages of HIV, they can't hold down meals because of the nausea that comes with chemotherapy or are grappling with the crippling symptoms of multiple sclerosis. Many struggle with chronic pain. "Our membership fluctuates. People go into remission and don't need chemotherapy anymore, but people also die and we never see them again," he says. "There was a case early on, Claude Messier, he had muscular dystrophy. He was shrivelled up, he couldn't walk, he got around on a motorized wheelchair. He had vicious, vicious muscle spasms all the time. Smoking was what helped him. "He was like a die-hard activist, a published author, a really bright guy and sadly he passed away a few years back." Messier was among the 18,000 Canadians licensed, by Health Canada, to use dried cannabis for medicinal purposes. Most get their product by mail order from a regulated supplier. Others reach out to "compassion clubs" like St-Maurice's. Access to marijuana for medical purposes has been legal since 1999, but Quebec's College of Physicians does not recognize it as a form of treatment. Under the college's guidelines, patients can only receive a prescription for "research purposes." Even so, St-Maurice says his dispensary has thousands of members, each of whom has a valid prescription - the Fondation's staff call doctor's offices to confirm. But that hasn't stopped police from cracking down on St-Maurice because of his precarious legal situation. Officers first raided his shop in 2000, snatching a few ounces of weed before they charged St-Maurice with trafficking narcotics. He fought the charge, spent two years in court and was acquitted. The second time around was much costlier. Police seized "pounds and pounds" of St-Maurice's stash in 2010, costing him "hundreds of thousands" of dollars in lost product and legal fees. St-Maurice blamed the 2010 raid on the opening of some rival "compassion clubs" on the West Island that did not screen customers properly and were aggressively trying to expand. "That rubbed some people the wrong way. Because once they looked into it, they saw, 'Oh, maybe these people aren't that medical after all.' And the decision was made that they raided everybody in Quebec. We get swept up in that as well." But Manuel Couture, a spokesperson for Montreal police, said police only apply the law. "We apply the Criminal Code, it's not a question of an officer's discretion. Even if we're talking about some marijuana flakes in someone's pockets, that's possession of marijuana," he said. St-Maurice's dispensary remains one of the rare ones in Quebec. Because of the dubious legal nature of its existence, it is still vulnerable to police intervention. But St-Maurice says he invites regulation and has been pressing the city to create its own marijuana bylaw, in hopes of laying down ground rules for dispensaries. In the meantime, St-Maurice is hopeful for the future. "The establishment is waking up to the reality that (medical marijuana) does work," he says. "They're still struggling with the issues of limiting access, making it legal while it's illegal recreationally, they're trying to navigate this but they're learning fast. "Now when it comes time to legalizing marijuana? That's a whole 'nother can worms." ARRESTED FOR MARIJUANA What happens when you get busted for possession of weed in this city? The Montreal Gazette put that question out to readers, legal experts and the proprietor of a marijuana dispensary. Taken as a whole, their answers could be summarized with just two word DARREN Montrealer, salesman, father of one The cops pulled a friend and me over in the West Island, searched our car, went through my pockets and found it. Next thing you know, I'm in the back of the police car, I'm at the station and they tell me they're pressing charges. I didn't want $7 of weed to f--ing screw up the rest of my life so I hired a lawyer. I had, literally, like not even a gram on me. My lawyer had explained to me that it's basically to the policeman's discretion if he wants to press charges or not. I unfortunately got a jerk. So we got our first court date and my lawyer calls and says, "I don't like that judge, we're going to postpone it." OK. Our second court date he did the same thing. Finally, on our third court date, he liked the judge and we went forward with our plan. He went in, spoke to the prosecutor, the judge and I ended up making a $1,500 donation to a women's shelter and they dropped the case. It was as if it never went to court, it's not on my record, there's no trace of it . ... It cost me a bunch of money - about $3,000 - for what it was. I had just been hired at (a major telecommunications company) and they do criminal background checks and a conviction would have been grounds for them to fire me. "JOHN" Cote-des-Neiges resident, student We were passing around a joint in a parking lot late one summer night when two cops rolled up. They searched all of us but I was the only one holding (I had maybe a gram on me). They asked us if we were in a gang, which, I don't think they would have asked us that if we were white. They ran all of our names through the system, it came back that none of us had a criminal record so they let my friends go. It was humiliating to be put in the back of a cop car, having to go in front of a judge, having to borrow money from my parents to pay for a lawyer. We're not rich, I know that the money we had to pay - I think it was $2,000 for a lawyer and we wrote a $1,500 cheque to a charity - for me not to have a criminal record really put a strain on the family. I broke the law, yeah, but I'm not a bad guy. I work, I go to school and sometimes I blow off some steam. MARC-BORIS ST-MAURICE Founder of Fondation Marijuana, activist, politician, punk rocker If you're smoking a joint walking down St-Laurent Blvd., honestly I think the cops have bigger issues to tackle here. If you're in a park in a suburb near a school and you're a 17-year-old kid and parents complain, you might find that they have to do something because of pressure. When it comes to the amount of people smoking marijuana versus those convicted, we're talking like 0.0013 per cent of users actually get slapped. You've got to ask yourself, what's the point? We wouldn't accept a murder solve rate of 0.0013 per cent. Why? Because we know it's wrong to take someone's life. We accept such a low solve rate with marijuana because we know that, aside from the person smoking, it's essentially a victimless crime. JASON CARMICHAEL McGill University criminology professor, former probation officer Carmichael was asked whether, in Canada, people of colour are disproportionately affected by drug laws. I am not familiar with any empirical data on this in Canada . ... Some scholars have described the application of marijuana laws as among the most glaring example of racial discrimination in the (American) criminal justice system . ... A study using arrest data from New York City showed that a full 15 per cent of all arrests over a 25-year period were for marijuana in public view. Sixty-four per cent of those arrests were of blacks and 25 per cent of Latinos. Given that marijuana use appears to be normally distributed across racial groups, a fair application of drug laws would look nothing like this. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt