Prohibition on medical pot cookies unconstitutional - Action News
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British Columbia

Prohibition on medical pot cookies unconstitutional

A B.C. Supreme Court judge has struck down a section of Canada's medical marijuana laws that said licensed users can not possess pot cookies or marijuana body creams.

Ruling comes from B.C. Supreme Court

Owen Smith with his lawyer Kirk Tousaw and Ted Smith, president of Cannabis Buyers' Club of Canada outside courthouse in Victoria. (CBC)

A B.C. Supreme Court judge has struck down a section of Canada's medical marijuana laws that said licensed users cannot possess pot cookies or marijuana body creams.

Justice Robert Johnston ruled the federal medical marijuana access regulation that allows permitted users toonlypossess dried marijuanais unconstitutional on Friday in Victoria.

The court challenge stems fromthe case of Owen Smith, who was charged with traffickingfor baking pot cookies and producing topical cannabis creams for a medical marijuana club in Victoria in 2009.

Health Canada allows people suffering from debilitating illnesses to have access to marijuana for medical purposes. They can get the marijuana through Health Canada or they can get permission to grow it themselves.

But Smith'slawyer Kirk Tousawsuccessfully arguedthere is a contradiction in the law, which allows the designated users to smoke marijuana but prohibits them from turning it into any other product.

However, Justice Johnston also ruled even though Smith's constitutional rights were breached by the regulation, he will still have to stand trial for trafficking because he may have been producing the products for people who weren't permitted users.