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CN SN: Pot Crusader Challenges Drug Possession Charge - Rave.ca
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News (Media Awareness Project) - CN SN: Pot Crusader Challenges Drug Possession Charge
Title:CN SN: Pot Crusader Challenges Drug Possession Charge
Published On:2003-08-13
Source:StarPhoenix, The (CN SN)
Fetched On:2008-08-24 16:50:36
POT CRUSADER CHALLENGES DRUG POSSESSION CHARGE

REGINA -- Cannabis crusader Marc Emery of B.C. was back in Regina Tuesday,
launching a constitutional challenge to his pot possession charge.

Emery, 45, who runs the B.C. Marijuana Party and has been a vociferous
critic of Canada's marijuana laws, entered a not guilty plea on a charge of
possessing under 30 grams of the drug.

The charge stems from July 12 when Emery lit up a marijuana pipe on the
steps of the Regina police station with several officers looking on. He was
arrested and spent seven hours in police cells.

Emery told provincial court Judge Diane Morris he will argue the charge is
a violation of his constitutional rights in light of recent court decisions
that have called into question whether the drug is still illegal.

"It's my clear understanding from the Ontario Court of Appeal decision that
cannabis has been struck from the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act," he
said.

On June 10, the Ontario Court of Appeal ruled it would not overturn an
Ontario Superior Court decision that cleared a teenager of marijuana
possession charges. The Superior Court judge ruled there is no current ban
on simple possession of marijuana in Ontario because the federal government
failed to comply with a earlier court order to make medical marijuana
available.

In the wake of those decisions, police forces across Ontario announced they
would not lay marijuana possession charges until there was a decision from
the Ontario Court of Appeal.

In several recent cases, Ontario judges have simply thrown out possession
charges.

Emery maintains possession of marijuana is now legal in Saskatchewan as
well as in the other provinces where he has been charged.

Morris adjourned his case for trial to Oct. 16.

Currently, the maximum penalty for simple possession of less than 30 grams
of marijuana is a six-month jail term and a $1,000 fine. Under proposed
legislation introduced May 27 by federal Justice Minister Martin Cauchon,
possession of up to 15 grams of pot could become a minor offence, fines
would be reduced and jail wouldn't be an option.

Emery says the proposed legislation is "terrible" because while it
decriminalizes simple possession, it includes stiff jail sentences for
people who cultivate pot.

"The Canadian government is trying to convince Canadians that growing 50
plants is tantamount to a whole host of violent criminal acts," he said.
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