News (Media Awareness Project) - CN ON: Laws Hit Legal Pothole |
Title: | CN ON: Laws Hit Legal Pothole |
Published On: | 2003-01-10 |
Source: | Edmonton Sun (CN AB) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-21 15:00:30 |
LAWS HIT LEGAL POTHOLE
Judge Terms Medicinal Marijuana Rules Unfair
TORONTO -- The laws prohibiting marijuana possession in Canada continued to
crumble yesterday as an Ontario judge declared unconstitutional Ottawa's
scheme to allow the use of pot for medical reasons.
It's not fair to allow people to smoke medicinal marijuana, then force them
to get the drug from the corner drug dealer, which is what the scheme
effectively does, said Superior Court Justice Sidney Lederman.
"Laws which put seriously ill, vulnerable people in a position where they
have to deal with the criminal underworld to obtain medicine they have been
authorized to take violate the constitutional right to security of the
person," Lederman wrote in a 40-page ruling. "I have grave reservations
about a regime which ... grants legal access by relying on drug dealers to
supply and distribute the required medicine."
Lederman gave the federal government six months to fix the regulations,
after which time they will be "of no force and effect."
The decision is another clear sign that the laws prohibiting possession of
small amounts of marijuana are toppling, said lawyer and longtime cannabis
crusader Alan Young, who argued the case.
"It's another nail in the coffin, and this is a big nail," an elated Young
said after learning of the ruling.
"We feel it will be appealed, but it's the light at the end of the tunnel
... I can't really see the law maintaining any operation after this year.
It's sitting on a really precarious foundation."
The regulations are supposed to give eligible people an exemption from the
Controlled Drugs and Substances Act, the law which makes possession of pot
illegal for everyone else.
Young argued last fall that the regulations are so snarled in red tape that
they discriminate against the very people they're supposed to help.
Since the Ontario Court of Appeal has already upheld the right of sick
people to smoke pot to ease their symptoms, Young said the law will
effectively be invalid if Lederman's ruling survives an appeal.
Judge Terms Medicinal Marijuana Rules Unfair
TORONTO -- The laws prohibiting marijuana possession in Canada continued to
crumble yesterday as an Ontario judge declared unconstitutional Ottawa's
scheme to allow the use of pot for medical reasons.
It's not fair to allow people to smoke medicinal marijuana, then force them
to get the drug from the corner drug dealer, which is what the scheme
effectively does, said Superior Court Justice Sidney Lederman.
"Laws which put seriously ill, vulnerable people in a position where they
have to deal with the criminal underworld to obtain medicine they have been
authorized to take violate the constitutional right to security of the
person," Lederman wrote in a 40-page ruling. "I have grave reservations
about a regime which ... grants legal access by relying on drug dealers to
supply and distribute the required medicine."
Lederman gave the federal government six months to fix the regulations,
after which time they will be "of no force and effect."
The decision is another clear sign that the laws prohibiting possession of
small amounts of marijuana are toppling, said lawyer and longtime cannabis
crusader Alan Young, who argued the case.
"It's another nail in the coffin, and this is a big nail," an elated Young
said after learning of the ruling.
"We feel it will be appealed, but it's the light at the end of the tunnel
... I can't really see the law maintaining any operation after this year.
It's sitting on a really precarious foundation."
The regulations are supposed to give eligible people an exemption from the
Controlled Drugs and Substances Act, the law which makes possession of pot
illegal for everyone else.
Young argued last fall that the regulations are so snarled in red tape that
they discriminate against the very people they're supposed to help.
Since the Ontario Court of Appeal has already upheld the right of sick
people to smoke pot to ease their symptoms, Young said the law will
effectively be invalid if Lederman's ruling survives an appeal.
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