Pubdate: Thu, 07 Oct 1999 Source: Toronto Star (Canada) Copyright: 1999, The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Page: A8 Author: Tracey Tyler, Toronto Star Legal Affairs Reporter MARIJUANA HYSTERIA NOT JUSTIFIED, COURT TOLD Activist, Epileptic Challenge Laws More than 600,000 Canadians have criminal records for possession of marijuana but Ottawa has no valid basis for making it a crime, Ontario's highest court has been told. Parliament outlawed pot amid hysteria over the drug in 1923, but the last 76 years have shown its harm is minimal, law professor Alan Young told the Ontario Court of Appeal yesterday. At one time in Canada, margarine was considered harmful and possessing it was also a crime, Young noted. ``I'm not standing in this court today asserting marijuana is harmless, perfectly harmless,'' he said. ``I couldn't say that about anything - studies show thousands of Americans injure themselves every year standing at their kitchen sink.'' People can die from drinking too much water, Young added. ``You can kill lab rats with sugar,'' he said. ``You can't kill them with marijuana.'' Young, a professor at Osgoode Hall law school, represents legal activist Christopher Clay, 28, who, along with Toronto epileptic Terry Parker, 44, are at the centre of a pivotal court battle to reform Canada's marijuana laws. Clay is appealing convictions for possession and trafficking. In Parker's case, the federal government is appealing a Scarborough judge's 1997 decision to stay charges against him for growing and using marijuana to control his seizures, ordering that his seized cannabis plants be returned. The appeals have landed in court amid what some regard as increasing inconsistency in Ottawa's stance on the use of marijuana. On one hand, Health Minister Allan Rock is promising clinical trials and just this week announced exemptions to allow 14 seriously ill people to use it. At the same time, the federal justice department is fighting to uphold Clay's conviction and to overturn Parker's stay, as well as the broader issues in the appeals. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea