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News (Media Awareness Project) - Wire: Canadian Epileptic Wins Right To Use Marijuana
Title:Wire: Canadian Epileptic Wins Right To Use Marijuana
Published On:1997-12-10
Source:RTna (Reuters North America)
Fetched On:2008-09-07 18:44:16
CANADIAN EPILEPTIC WINS RIGHT TO USE MARIJUANA

TORONTO (Reuters) An Ontario judge ruled Wednesday that a Toronto man
could grow and use marijuana to control his severe epilepsy, saying the law
banning the medicinal use of the drug was unconstitutional.

The landmark ruling was a major victory for advocates of the legalization
of marijuana for medical use and for defendant Terrence Parker, 42, who has
fought for 20 years to use the drug to control his severe form of epilepsy.

The use of marijuana for medical purposes has become hotly debated in
Canada and the United States in recent years. A recent poll found that more
than 80 percent of Canadians in favor of legalizing marijuana for medical use.

Judge Patrick Sheppard acquitted Parker on charges of marijuana cultivation
and possession. The judge ruled that the materials used to grow the plant
and the 71 marijuana plants seized from Parker's apartment must be returned
to him.

Prosecutor Kevin Wilson declined to comment on the outcome of the case, but
vowed to appeal the ruling.

Parker had been acquitted in a previous case of marijuana possession on the
grounds of medical necessity.

Law experts said the latest case was legally significant because Parker
based his defense on the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, added to Canada's
constitution in 1982.

Toronto criminal lawyer Alan Young said: "The difference is that in
precharter the decision only applied to Parker and had no implication for
any other medical patient.

"When you raise it as a constitutional claim it has broader implications
because presumably now this ruling though it will be appealed of course
will apply to anyone who can present cogent evidence of a medical
necessity."

Young, who represents a multiple sclerosis patient also seeking legal
access to marijuana, said the Parker case "is the first in a series of
cases that will be taking place in Ontario. Slowly but surely there should
be an accumulation of precedence, which should dismantle the prohibition
(of marijuana) for the purpose of medical use."

Young said: "We have to get it up to the higher court but we have to start
in the lower courts system. It will take probably a year and a half to see
if this ruling or any other ruling will actually change the law into the
future."

The Epilepsy Association of Toronto welcomed the ruling, saying: "We feel
people should have opportunities and options to choose from. People who
have epilepsy, by in large, are on medication to try and control their
seizures. Lots of them do not get control of their seizures through those
medicines and are searching for another way."

Epilepsy Association education coordinator Robin Rowe said that "we don't
know if marijuana helps because there hasn't been a lot of research done."
She said that since marijuana was not a product from which drug companies
could benefit financially, "there's no real impetus to do research."

Copyright 1997 Reuters Ltd.
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