Pubdate: Thursday, 4 Feb 1999 Source: London Free Press (Canada) Copyright: 1999 The London Free Press a division of Sun Media Corporation. Contact: http://www.canoe.ca/LondonFreePress/home.html Forum: http://www.lfpress.com/londoncalling/SelectForum.asp Author: Don Murray, Free Press Court Reporter POT SMOKER CAN'T GET A HEARING The case of pot crusader Lynn Harichy continues to drift along while the Ontario Court of Appeal ponders a long-awaited decision in another marijuana-as-medicine case. Harichy, a 37-year-old Londoner with multiple sclerosis, was charged with possession Sept. 15, 1997, when she lit up a joint on the steps of police headquarters to protest marijuana laws. She says she needs the illegal weed to ease the pain and spasms of her illness. Harichy appeared in London court yesterday for a third attempt to set a trial date, only to be remanded out of custody until Feb. 10. The probable tactic then will be to set a trial date several months down the road in hopes that the appeal court will have finally released its decision. That case involves a Crown appeal of a Toronto man's victory in court after his pot-growing operation was busted in 1996. In a precedent-setting Charter of Rights and Freedoms case, a Toronto judge ruled Terry Parker had a medical need to smoke marijuana as treatment for epilepsy. The judge stayed charges of cultivating and possession against Parker, 42, but convicted him of a trafficking charge. He was sentenced to time served and put on probation for a year. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck