Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Four B.C. Patients Challenge Medical Marijuana Regime In Federal Court

The Canadian Press, 23 Feb, 2015 01:14 PM
    VANCOUVER — A lawyer representing four patients has told a Federal Court judge that Canada's new rules governing medical marijuana are forcing them to choose between their health and their liberty.
     
    John Conroy launched a constitutional challenge on behalf of the patients, who argue the federal government violated their rights when it attempted to ban home growing and instead move production to commercial operations.
     
    His clients say they can't afford marijuana under the new system, which also doesn't give them control over the specific strains they use.
     
    Conroy has told a Federal Court judge that because the new regulations make marijuana production illegal, patients must choose between medicine and jail.
     
    He's asking the court to force the government to allow patients to grow their own marijuana and possess it in forms other than dried pot.
     
    A federal government lawyer says the old system of allowing patients to grow their own marijuana was unsafe and failed to ensure patients had access to a high-quality, uncontaminated supply.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadian Businessman Jailed In Cuba On Corruption Charges Returns Home

    Canadian Businessman Jailed In Cuba On Corruption Charges Returns Home
    VAUGHAN, Ont. — A Canadian businessman is back in Canada following more than three years in Cuba due to a prolonged legal dispute.

    Canadian Businessman Jailed In Cuba On Corruption Charges Returns Home

    Press Operators And Mechanics Locked Out At Halifax's Chronicle Herald

    Press Operators And Mechanics Locked Out At Halifax's Chronicle Herald
    HALIFAX — Nova Scotia's largest newspaper has locked out its unionized printing plant employees after contract negotiations failed to reach an agreement.

    Press Operators And Mechanics Locked Out At Halifax's Chronicle Herald

    New Wrinkle Develops In Tory Plan To Fast-track Veterans Into Civil Service

    New Wrinkle Develops In Tory Plan To Fast-track Veterans Into Civil Service
    OTTAWA — Another wrinkle has developed in the Harper government's push to give veterans preferred status for federal jobs: for many reservists, not all of their military pension counts towards their eventual civil service retirement.

    New Wrinkle Develops In Tory Plan To Fast-track Veterans Into Civil Service

    Matsqui Prison In Abbotsford Under Lockdown After Inmate Stabbed

    Matsqui Prison In Abbotsford Under Lockdown After Inmate Stabbed
    ABBOTSFORD, B.C. — A federal prison in Abbotsford, B.C., was placed under lockdown after an inmate was stabbed on Friday.

    Matsqui Prison In Abbotsford Under Lockdown After Inmate Stabbed

    Two Men Seriously Injured In Abbotsford Fight; One Shot, One Stabbed

    Two Men Seriously Injured In Abbotsford Fight; One Shot, One Stabbed
    ABBOTSFORD, B.C. — Two men are in hospital with serious injuries after a brawl in Abbotsford, B.C. Police say one man was shot and the other was stabbed.

    Two Men Seriously Injured In Abbotsford Fight; One Shot, One Stabbed

    B.C. Transit Police Announce End To Agreement With Canada Border Service

    B.C. Transit Police Announce End To Agreement With Canada Border Service
    VANCOUVER — Metro Vancouver Transit Police are changing the way officers deal with undocumented migrants during fare checks over the case of a Mexican woman who hanged herself while awaiting deportation.

    B.C. Transit Police Announce End To Agreement With Canada Border Service