Source: London Free Press Contact: Pubdate: December 12, 1997 Author: Trish Tervit Sun Media Newspapers With: files from Philip LeeShanok LONDONER COULD WIN RIGHT TO USE POT Terry Parker may soon have someone to toke with legally. Multiple sclerosis sufferer Lynn Harichy, 36, is headed to court in London in April to make the same case as Parker. Her lawyer, Osgoode Hall law professor Alan Young, is optimistic they'll win the case, making Harichy the second person legally allowed to smoke marijuana for medicinal purposes in Canada. "I'll go forward with the multiple sclerosis case," Young said, "and we'll probably win because of Terry's case" and the evidence of the helpful effects of marijuana on MS spasms and pain. "This is the next serious claim being made." But before he wins, the lawyer will have to prove the debilitating and painful effects of Harichy's illness, that conventional treatments haven't helped and that pot is an effective remedy. Harichy will be defending charges of possession at the threeday trial which begins April 27. Crown attorneys have already tried to drop the charges, but Harichy says she won't let them. "I want the laws changed and I'm not just going to walk away," said Harichy. Meanwhile, Parker's lawyer Aaron Harnett said Crown attorneys are looking into tagteaming their appeal with another case from August. Hemp crusader Chris Clay, a former Londoner now in Vancouver, was found guilty of possessing and selling marijuana in August. His appeal and Parker's may go at the same time at the Ontario Court of Appeal, said Harnett. "They sometimes hear appeals at the same time if they involve the same issues," Harnett added.