Source: Ottawa Citizen Contact: Pubdate: 13 Dec 1997 Section: Page A9 Author: Luiza Chwialkowska, The Ottawa Citizen Website: http://www.ottawacitizen.com/ PATIENT SUES FOR ACCESS TO MARIJUANA A Toronto AIDS victim is preparing to sue the federal government for not allowing him to smoke marijuana – and for not supplying him with the drug in the first place. "The Parker ruling was a foot in the door, not a solution," said Jim Wakefield of Wednesday’s landmark legal decision, in which an Ontario justice ruled that medicinal use of marijuana is legal. Mr. Wakeford, 53, wants the government to protect his right to smoke marijuana. He also wants the government to grow the drug and provide it through prescriptions so he doesn’t have to purchase it on the black market where, he said, "it can be laced with who knows what." As soon as he can raise the money to cover his court fees, which his lawyer estimates will be between $20,000 and $50,000, Mr. Wakeford intends to launch a constitutional challenge in the General Division of the Ontario Court of Justice. So far, Mr. Wakeford has received $500 from Torontobased AIDS Action Now, of which he is a member. "We want the court to grant a declaration ordering that patients suffering with AIDS be entitled to possess and consume marijuana upon the recommendation of their personal physician," said Mr. Wakeford, who was diagnosed with AIDS in 1989 and smokes one or two joints a day to control nausea and other sideeffects of his medications. "The declaration would include an order that the Government of Canada supply the marijuana through the experimental farm in Ottawa," he said. Mr. Wakeford’s lawyer, Alan Young – who is also defending multiple sclerosis patient Lynn Harichy in a medical marijuana case in London, Ont. – said this week’s Ontario Court decision probably will not help other patients like Mr. Wakeford, because it does not bind higher courts and because it does not say how patients would be protected from arrest and prosecution. And he emphasized that the court’s ruling did not address the issue of access to marijuana. "The government is saying to AIDS patients: ‘We know you can barely get out of bed in the morning, but if you want marijuana, you’re going to have to find it yourself," said Mr. Young. "If the doctor says that you need marijuana, we think the government should be able to fill the prescription." Ironically, this week’s ruling is posing a new obstacle to Mr. Wakeford’s fundraising attempts. The charitable foundations Mr. Wakeford is approaching for financial support must choose between donating money to his court case, or saving it to use in the event that Judge Sheppard’s decision is appealed. "We are in a tough spot," said Russell Armstrong, executive director of the Ottawabased Canadian AIDS Society. "We support the legalization of marijuana as a treatment, but we don’t have a lot of money to fight issues in court, and we have to choose where to invest." Mr. Wakeford is launching the suit on his personal initiative – out of frustration with what he considers the slow pace of government action on the issue.