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Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON)
Wed, 11 Dec 2002 Author: Kelly Egan
Rick Reimer was a prominent criminal
lawyer in Pembroke. Then he was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. Mr. Reimer
uses marijuana daily to cope with the effects of his illness and intends to use
an impaired driving charge to scrutinize the law's approach toward marijuana and
its impacts on life.
As Canada inches closer to softer
marijuana laws, a retired Killaloe lawyer is asking the courts to rule on the murky
issue of driving while under the influence of cannabis.
Rick Reimer intends to use an impaired
driving charge to scrutinize the wobbly approach of legislators toward the use
of marijuana and its impacts on daily life.
In a case that begins in a tiny courtroom
tomorrow, he is both the accused and defender.
Mr. Reimer, 47, a prominent criminal
lawyer in Pembroke until his retirement two years ago, uses marijuana daily to
cope with the effects of multiple sclerosis. He was diagnosed four years ago
and, in November 2000, was granted a Health Canada exemption to use the drug for
medicinal purposes.
"I smoke marijuana constantly, from
morning until night," said Mr. Reimer, estimating he smokes about 10 to 12
joints a day.
On Feb. 11, he was pulled over on Highway
60 as he made his way toward Pembroke at about 11 a.m. on a clear, sunny morning
that followed a fresh snowfall.
He was stopped by an OPP officer near
Round Lake Centre for allegedly weaving about the road. Mr. Reimer displayed
some of the classic signs of impairment: slurred voice and unsteady gait.
Those are precisely the symptoms of his
disorder, he says. The smoking of marijuana, he argues, actually makes him a
better driver.
"There's no doubt whatsoever that I am not
impaired in any way, shape or form by marijuana smoking, any more than a tobacco
smoker would be," he said yesterday.
One of the central issues in the trial
promises to be the inability of police officers to assess precisely -- at the
roadside or in the station -- the level of impairment caused by marijuana
smoking.
Unlike the test for alcohol, there is no
quick and easy method to determine levels of THC in a driver's system. And
unlike alcohol, THC, the active ingredient in marijuana, stays in the body for
long periods.
Mr. Reimer hopes to use the criminal trial
to expose what he considers the government's hypocritical attitude toward the
legal use of marijuana.
The unusual court case comes the same week
Justice Minister Martin Cauchon said he intends to proceed with legislation,
likely to be introduced by April, that would decriminalize the possession of
small amounts of marijuana.
"If Cauchon comes down with
decriminalization, you're going to see all kinds of situations where cops pull
over drivers," said Mr. Reimer. "There is no way for the officer to gauge what
level of THC, if any, is in the bloodstream of the driver."
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Mr. Reimer said the federal government has
failed to deal with these issues, just as he thinks it has bungled the matter of
medicinal marijuana.
"They should have been thinking of this 20
years ago. Instead, they buried their heads in the sand and now they've been
dragged kicking and screaming into it and they've been caught with their pants
down."
As a defence lawyer, Mr. Reimer defended
dozens, if not hundreds, of impaired drivers. He is so well-known in the justice
community in Renfrew County that an out-of-county Crown, Mac Lindsay of Ottawa,
was brought in to prosecute.
Mr. Lindsay declined to discuss the case
in detail yesterday, except to say he would be calling the arresting officer and
a toxicologist.
Proving the effect of marijuana on a
driver -- at least to a criminal
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