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Pubdate: Wed, 12 Mar 2003 Source: Edmonton Sun (CN AB) Copyright: 2003, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.fyiedmonton.com/htdocs/edmsun.shtml Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/135 Author: Sherri Borden, Canadian Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmjcn.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal - Canada) POT APPEAL GIVEN UP HALIFAX -- A federal inmate suffering rapid weight loss and chronic pain is no longer appealing one judge's refusal to hear arguments on his right to smoke pot behind bars, but he may try another court. "I hereby give notice, that I, Michael Ronald Patriquen, the appellant, abandon the appeal herein," Patriquen wrote in a brief document filed at the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal. The appeal was to have been heard April 1. In an interview yesterday from Westmorland Institution in New Brunswick, the Nova Scotia Marijuana Party founder said that since Corrections Canada has forbidden him from accessing his legally prescribed marijuana while in prison, the door has now opened for him to fight in the Federal Court of Canada. Patriquen, of Middle Sackville, N.S., has hired British Columbia lawyer John Conroy, an expert in cannabis law and penal law. He is serving six years in prison for conspiring to possess marijuana in Nova Scotia and conspiring to traffic in marijuana in Nova Scotia and Newfoundland in 1999 and 2000. Last September, Justice Suzanne Hood of the Nova Scotia Supreme Court ruled that she had no jurisdiction to hear his arguments because it is a civil court matter. Patriquen suffered from chronic neck pain as a result of a 1999 car accident and is among a select group of Canadians licensed to use marijuana for medicinal purposes. Armed with two federal licences to grow and smoke marijuana, Patriquen inhaled up to five grams of pot daily before he was jailed. Without the joints, he said he's wasting away with nausea from untreated pain. "This has been going on for six months and I'm very weak from it," he said. "As of (Monday), I had lost 39 pounds because of my inability to eat since the time of my sentencing on Sept. 10." At sentencing, Patriquen weighed 202 pounds. But now he says he feels like a cripple. "I'm hoping I'll be given access to my medicine so I don't die, because I really don't have a lot of weight left to lose," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom