your thoughts on today's court case(federal)

Doc Weedlaw

Member
"[11] As we have held, the MMAR did not create a constitutionally acceptable medical exemption. In Parker, this court made it clear that the criminal prohibition against possession of marihuana, absent a constitutionally acceptable medical exemption, was of no force and effect. As of April 12, 2002, there was no constitutionally acceptable medical exemption. It follows that as of that date the offence of possession of marihuana in s. 4 of the CDSA was of no force and effect. The respondent could not be prosecuted.

[34] We would dismiss the appeal."

The Crown lost the appeal, and the court upheld the invalidity of the CDSA possession prohibition of marihuana.

Interpretation Act 2(2) states:

Expired and replaced enactments

(2) For the purposes of this Act, an enactment that has been replaced is repealed and an enactment that has expired, lapsed or otherwise ceased to have effect is deemed to have been repealed.

R.S., 1985, c. I-21, s. 2; 1993, c. 34, s. 88; 1999, c. 31, s. 146; 2003, c. 22, s. 224(E).It is clear that the legislative prohibition was found to be of no force and effect in*Parker*and is therefore to be deemed repealed. The Crown and the Court lack jurisdiction to proceed with prosecutions, and the Police with arrests.

In a most recent decision in*Sfetkopoulos v. Canada FCA, it was found that the Marihuana Medical Access Regulations have continued to be unconstitutional. In the Crown's memorandum to the Supreme Court of Canada for leave to appeal the Crown states:

"The Court in R. v. JP ruled that the combined effect of Parker and Hitzig meant there was no constitutionally valid marijuana possession offence between July 31 2001 and Oct 7 2003, the date the MMAR were constitutionally rectified by the decision in Hitzig. Courts may construe the Federal Court of Appeal's decision as creating a similar period of retrospective invalidity dating back to December 3 2003, the date that s.41(b.1) was re-introduced into the MMAR."

The retrospective invalidity of the CDSA 4(1) prohibition as it applies to cannabis marihuana, began on Aug. 1, 2001 in accordance to the decision in*Parker*and is still invalid at the present. The MMAR could not save the repeal of the CDSA 4(1) prohibition. Unless Parliament enacts a new prohibition, the possession of marijuana is not an offence known to law.


Her Majesty the Queen v. Matthew David Beren (B.C.) (Criminal) (By Leave) (33071)* Jan 14, 2010

DISMISSED WITHOUT COSTS / REJETÉES SANS DÉPENS
(The motion for an extension of time to serve and file the application for leave to appeal is granted. The application for leave to appeal is dismissed without costs. The application for leave to cross-appeal is quashed.
Coram: McLachlin / Abella / Rothstein

So now the Supreme Court of Canada has dimissed the Crown's appeal in Beren, therefore uphold the MMAR as unconstitutional and confirming the CDSA cannabis prohibitions invalid.

Federal Crown Attorney Kevin Wilson's admission to the Superior Court in R. v. Pallister admits the MMAR were unconstitutional. So anyone charged before May 14, 2009 can have their charges overturned.

R. v. Pallister, *Crown Attorney Kevin Wilson to SCO:**
"20. In express response to Sfetkopoulos paragraph*
41(b.1) of the MMAR was amended Effective May 14 2009*
to permit the holder of a production licence to grow*
for up to two ATP-holders. Although Sfetkopoulos*
determined that the pre-amendment regime was*
constitutionally defective, it necessarily has made no*
such determination with respect to the post-amendment*
regime. As the offence date of the Applicant's charges*
is October 2 2009, the alleged offences took place*
under the post-amendment regime. The MMAR were amended*
before the Applicant's alleged offence."

The*MMAR s. 54.1*defect found in*Hitzig*and then again in*Beren*was repealed two weeks after the Pallister*case.* Canada*Gazette

Primacy of Constitution of Canada

52. (1) The Constitution of Canada is the supreme law of Canada, and any law that is inconsistent with the provisions of the Constitution is, to the extent of the inconsistency, of no force or effect.

The Supreme Court of Canada in,**Canada (Attorney General)*v.Hislop, [2007] 1 S.C.R. 429, 2007 SCC 10 para 82- 83 states:

*

82 Section 52(1) instructs courts to declare unconstitutional legislation of no force or effect. When a court issues a declaration of invalidity, it declares that, henceforth, the unconstitutional law cannot be enforced. The nullification of a law is thus prospective. However, s. 52(1) may also operate retroactively so far as the parties are concerned, reaching into the past to annul the effects of the unconstitutional law: see, e.g.,*Miron v. Trudel*

83 This Court has applied in many cases the "declaratory approach" to constitutional remedies, which implies that s. 52(1) remedies are often given retroactive effect. See, for example,*Nova Scotia (Workers’ Compensation Board) v. Martin*at para. 28, Gonthier J. On this view, s. 52(1) remedies are deemed to be fully retroactive because the legislature never had the authority to enact an unconstitutional law. In the words of Professor Hogg, a declaration of constitutional invalidity "involves the nullification of the law from the outset*(P. W. Hogg,*Constitutional Law of Canada*(loose-leaf ed.), vol. 2, at p. 55-2 (emphasis added)). If the law was invalid from the outset, then any government action taken pursuant to that law is also invalid, and consequently, those affected by it have a right to redress which reaches back into the past.

*

Here is a*word from*Peter Hogg's widely respected*Canadian Constitutional Law. Courts are not allowed to do what the OCA did in Hitzig; says Hogg,*"the courts may not reconstruct an unconstitutional statute in order to render it constitutional."*There ought to come a point at which a court*"will recognize that an unconstitutional statute cannot be salvaged except by changes that are too profound, too policy-laden and too controversial to be carried out by a court."*In such cases, as the Supreme Court Justice Lamer had argued in Schacter (1991),*"it is the legislature's role to fill in the gaps, not the court's"*(40-21, 5th edition, 2007)
*

As it stands right now, in fact and law, the offence of possession of marihuana is of no force and effect. Innocent people are being arrested and prosecuted unlawfully.* This is a judicial and democratic mockery and treasonous actions by the Harper Government, against the Canadian people





*Court Certified Information withdraw.

With_drawn.jpg
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Derek Francisco's Section 24(1) Order*for return of his cannabis.
 

Doc Weedlaw

Member
R v. Hitzig 2003-
[170] First, if we do not suspend our order, there will immediately be a constitutionally valid exemption in effect and the marihuana prohibition in s. 4 of the CDSA will immediately be constitutionally valid and of full force and effect. In R. v. Parker, supra, this court declared the prohibition invalid as of July 31, 2001 if by that date the Government had not enacted a constitutionally sound medical exemption. Our decision in this case confirms that it did not do so. Hence the marihuana prohibition in s. 4 has been of no force or effect since July 31, 2001. Since the July 8, 2003 regulation did not address the eligibility deficiency, that alone could not have cured the problem. However, our order has the result of constitutionalizing the medical exemption created by the Government. As a result, the marihuana prohibition ins. 4 is no longer inconsistent with the provisions of the Constitution. Although Parliament may subsequently choose to change it, that prohibition is now no longer invalid, but is of full force and effect. Those who establish medical need are simply exempted from it. This consequence removes the cloud of uncertainty from the marihuana prohibition in s. 4 of the CDSA – a cloud which we were told in argument has created very considerable confusion for courts and law enforcement agencies alike. A suspension of our remedy would simply have continued that undesirable uncertainty for a further period of time.
 

Doc Weedlaw

Member
In a most recent decision in Sfetkopoulos v. Canada FCA, it was found that the Marihuana Medical Access Regulations have continued to be unconstitutional. In the Crown's memorandum to the Supreme Court of Canada for leave to appeal the Crown states:
"The Court in R. v. JP ruled that the combined effect of Parker and Hitzig meant there was no constitutionally valid marijuana possession offence between July 31 2001 and Oct 7 2003, the date the MMAR were constitutionally rectified by the decision in Hitzig. Courts may construe the Federal Court of Appeal's decision as creating a similar period of retrospective invalidity dating back to December 3 2003, the date that s.41(b.1) was re-introduced into the MMAR."
The retrospective invalidity of the CDSA 4(1) prohibition as it applies to cannabis marihuana, began on Aug. 1, 2001 in accordance to the decision in Parker and is still invalid at the present. The MMAR could not save the repeal of the CDSA 4(1) prohibition. Unless Parliament enacts a new prohibition, the possession of marijuana is not an offence known to law.
 

Doc Weedlaw

Member
Sorry for repeating myself..maybe..I'm trying drill it into peoples heads not to be fooled,,Your welcome FG Everything is on http://ccldr.net When I got 197 Grams back from a judge in 06 Ken Surgent cantacted me..He dedicated this site to all Canadians using note he took while I educated him for 2 years..He never even had an exemption still dont..He got all his seeds returnted. I have got peoples trucks back, grow Equiptment back, kids back, personal property back, and most important their lives back and all cannabis charges stayed after I get them an exemption,,I'm sure more then 40 ppl or more. I am not a Lawyer. So do yourself a favor folks do some reading on this site and educate yourself! I'f anyone has any Qs or concerns dont hesitate to contact me. You can do this at http://canadiancannabisconsulting.ca toll free or tx or call my cell @ 705 934 3372.
 

Doc Weedlaw

Member
Yes, I got Lindsay On finest on my servailance watch..lol They were found to have violated my Rights and misconduct bc both cops called me an idiot..Shot themselves right in the foot..lol I do this all day long,,on airline to courts to hospitals car rentals hotels,
 

Doc Weedlaw

Member
Oxy is not a controlled substance...lmao Cops go to school for two years ppl,,I'm way above their paygrade concerning cannabis law..lol
 

MarijeJane

Well-Known Member
I honestly have no issues with your opinions and would even take it as far as to say I respect them as well(the ones that make some sort of sense that is), my issue with you is more related to how you present yourself which lacks any kind of intelligence or maturity. I would encourage anybody to read this guys posts if anyone is wondering what I'm talking about...warning though, you'll wish you hadn't.


  • You must spread some Reputation around before giving it to R.Raider again.




 

bcbud11

Member
Oxy is not a controlled substance...lmao Cops go to school for two years ppl,,I'm way above their paygrade concerning cannabis law..lol
Hey Doc Weedlaw, I'm just trying to follow your posts here.. are you referring to Oxycodone? How does that relate to your previous posts? Thanks in advance for the clarification!
 

Doc Weedlaw

Member
Hey Doc Weedlaw, I'm just trying to follow your posts here.. are you referring to Oxycodone? How does that relate to your previous posts? Thanks in advance for the clarification!
Its not relivent y o my previous posts..its relivent to the video of cops searching me without a warrant or my consent. Just trying to break up the j rock fewed.. deff not relivent..most mods would jack these posters for high jacking our discusions..ok kids lets keep this post going with sensible information that can help and protect a lot a ppl :D No offense to anyone..I just dont post on many forums and this is usaully why.
 

Doc Weedlaw

Member
Gro Rock Raider fewed I should say..usaully when ppl high jack post I suspect them or ppl that would try and through off such an informative and educational post.
 

Doc Weedlaw

Member
I guess it is relivent to my previous posts..Im educating patients on how to deal with law enforcment..even if you know your right be polite and go after them for violating your rights. And with these new 150g carry limits it makes that video relivent..to show patients that they are Not subject to an illegal search and seizure without a warrant or probable cause or without your consent..Those officers violated my human right and were found to be in misconduct for calling me an idiot..after telling me I should brush up on the criminal code.
 

Doc Weedlaw

Member
The cop stated in my video that oxy was not a controlled substance..yes oxy cotton or what ever how you say..:$ umm ive never them..
 
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