Pubdate: Fri, 16 Dec 2016 Source: StarPhoenix, The (CN SN) Copyright: 2016 The StarPhoenix Contact: http://thestarphoenix.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/400 Author: Bre McAdam Page: A2 THREE COMMITTED TO TRIAL ON TRAFFICKING CHARGES IN COMPASSION CLUB CASE Three people involved with a downtown Saskatoon medical marijuana dispensary before it was raided in 2015 have been committed to stand trial on trafficking-related charges. The preliminary hearing for Mark Phillip Hauk, Lane Anthony Britnell and Jaime Michelle Hagel wrapped up in Saskatoon provincial court on Thursday. Hauk owned the Saskatchewan Compassion Club, Britnell was an employee, and Hagel was a volunteer. Each faces four charges: one count of possession for the purpose of trafficking marijuana, two counts of trafficking marijuana and one count of possessing proceeds of crime over $5,000. The defence called witnesses at the preliminary hearing. Five police officers took the stand in October; two more testified Thursday. The purpose of the hearing was to lay the groundwork for whatever follows at the higher court level, Judge Barry Morgan explained after committing the matter to Court of Queen's Bench. Const. Michael Johnson, a member of the Saskatoon city police drug enforcement unit who testified Thursday, said he followed Hauk to a grocery store a month before the dispensary raid. On Oct. 27, he waited outside the club while an officer bought marijuana with a fake prescription after being turned away the previous week. The next day, he swore information-to-obtain search warrants for Hauk's home and the compassion club on Second Avenue North. He read Hauk and Britnell their charges when the men were arrested during the raid on Oct. 29, 2015. At the time, Johnson said he was not aware that the club was specifically selling medical marijuana, or that Hauk and Britnell had medical-marijuana prescriptions. Supt. David Haye said he didn't not know how much marijuana a prescription holder could legally possess. Police were investigating marijuana trafficking and no simple possession charges were laid, the Crown clarified. Johnson said he checked with Health Canada to determine the club did not have a licence to sell medical marijuana. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt