News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: Pot Activists Hail Court Victory, but Crown Says It's Non Binding |
Title: | Canada: Pot Activists Hail Court Victory, but Crown Says It's Non Binding |
Published On: | 2007-11-15 |
Source: | Nelson Daily News (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-11 18:27:13 |
POT ACTIVISTS HAIL COURT VICTORY, BUT CROWN SAYS IT'S NON BINDING
OTTAWA - Marijuana activists are hailing a recent court ruling as the
beginning of the end of Canada's prohibition on pot, but the Crown
dismisses the decision as non-binding.
A trial judge in Oshawa, Ont., threw out charges of simple possession
of marijuana against three young men on Oct. 19, relying on a previous
court ruling that found Canada's pot law unconstitutional.
In making his decision, Justice Norman Edmondson cited a decision last
July by a fellow judge of the Ontario Court of Justice.
In the earlier case, which is being appealed by the Crown, Justice
Howard Borenstein accepted the defence lawyer's argument that Ottawa
must pass a law - rather than rely solely on government policy - to
allow accredited medical marijuana users to possess pot.
Health Canada has been forced by a series of court decisions to set up
a medical marijuana program authorizing patients struggling with
chronic conditions to use dope to alleviate their symptoms.
And a court ruling in 2003 required Health Canada to provide
government-certified marijuana to these patients so they don't have to
turn to the black market for their medicine.
In the July 13 Borenstein decision, defence lawyer Bryan McAllister
successfully argued that the law itself should have been changed, not
just the program.
And because the law has not been rewritten to accommodate medical
users, the prohibition on all use - including recreational use -
collapses because the law is unconstitutional, the court ruled.
A spokeswoman for the Crown said the October decision in Oshawa will
not be appealed.
"The decision of the trial judge is not binding upon any other trial
judge and the (Borenstein) decision he relied upon ... was wrongly
decided," Stephane Marinier, of the Brampton, Ont., office of Public
Prosecution Service of Canada, said in a e-mail.
OTTAWA - Marijuana activists are hailing a recent court ruling as the
beginning of the end of Canada's prohibition on pot, but the Crown
dismisses the decision as non-binding.
A trial judge in Oshawa, Ont., threw out charges of simple possession
of marijuana against three young men on Oct. 19, relying on a previous
court ruling that found Canada's pot law unconstitutional.
In making his decision, Justice Norman Edmondson cited a decision last
July by a fellow judge of the Ontario Court of Justice.
In the earlier case, which is being appealed by the Crown, Justice
Howard Borenstein accepted the defence lawyer's argument that Ottawa
must pass a law - rather than rely solely on government policy - to
allow accredited medical marijuana users to possess pot.
Health Canada has been forced by a series of court decisions to set up
a medical marijuana program authorizing patients struggling with
chronic conditions to use dope to alleviate their symptoms.
And a court ruling in 2003 required Health Canada to provide
government-certified marijuana to these patients so they don't have to
turn to the black market for their medicine.
In the July 13 Borenstein decision, defence lawyer Bryan McAllister
successfully argued that the law itself should have been changed, not
just the program.
And because the law has not been rewritten to accommodate medical
users, the prohibition on all use - including recreational use -
collapses because the law is unconstitutional, the court ruled.
A spokeswoman for the Crown said the October decision in Oshawa will
not be appealed.
"The decision of the trial judge is not binding upon any other trial
judge and the (Borenstein) decision he relied upon ... was wrongly
decided," Stephane Marinier, of the Brampton, Ont., office of Public
Prosecution Service of Canada, said in a e-mail.
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