-Caveat Lector-

Subject: A US Woman Seeks Political Asylum In Canada, Claiming Persecution
Date: Wednesday, October 20, 1999 4:57 PM

Christian Science Monitor 10/19/99


A US Woman Seeks Political Asylum In Canada, Claiming Persecution
In Marijuana Case.

Christian Science Monitor 10/19/99

by Ruth Walker


A US woman wanted in California for conspiring to sell marijuana
is fighting extradition from Canada on the grounds that she is a
political refugee - from the war on drugs.

Her belief in the medicinal value of marijuana makes her in effect
a member of a persecuted group, her lawyer argues.

This case is more than an unprecedented legal gambit.  It also
illustrates the contradictory laws and enduring sensitivity of
marijuana as a public issue in the United States and Canada.

It's been nearly three years since Golden State voters approved
a new law allowing medicinal use of cannabis.  But questions
about how sick people are to be supplied with their newly legal
medicine remain to be resolved, and US federal authorities remain
adamant in their opposition to state laws such as California's
Proposition 215, the Compassionate Use Act.  Prosecutions for
distribution of marijuana continue.

And so Renee Boje, arrested in 1997 in the Bel Air, Calif., home
of Todd McCormick, a high-profile advocate of medicinal marijuana,
has been charged with conspiracy to distribute the drug, an
offense carrying a sentence of 10 years to life.  She faces an
extradition hearing Nov.  1 in Vancouver.

"She's caught in the cross-fire of the war on drugs," says Maury
Mason, her spokesman, in Roberts Creek, British Columbia.

Political Factor

A US official requesting anonymity calls the use of the term
"political asylum" by Ms. Boje's advocates "an artificial way
of casting the discussion," but acknowledges, "There's always a
major political element in a drug case."

But Boje's lawyer, John Conroy, of Abbotsford, British Columbia,
insists, "It's not a stretch to say that it's a political issue."
The severity of the sentence she faces if convicted indicates an
"unjust and oppressive" justice system, Mr.  Conroy argues.  He
suggests that the charge she would face if the case were playing
out in Canada would be "aiding and abetting cultivation" of the
drug - with a maximum sentence of seven years.

Mr. Mason, a former media director for the environmental group
Greenpeace, says the campaign on Boje's behalf has two purposes,
"One, to get her off, and two, to send a message to the US: Take
a look at your own drug policy."

But the Boje case is unfolding at a time when Canada is going
through its own struggle over the issue of medical marijuana.
Currently, those wishing to use the drug legally for medicinal
purposes - to alleviate pain or control side effects from other
drugs - must apply to the federal health minister in Ottawa.
Getting permission has been widely deemed cumbersome and bureau-
cratic, a process in which he has broad, if not complete,
discretion. This month 14 applications were approved - bringing
the total of legal marijuana smokers to 16 across Canada.

But at the same time, federal lawyers have been in court
in Toronto, seeking to overturn a provincial court's ruling
allowing an individual diagnosed as epileptic to smoke marijuana
legally to control what are described as life-threatening seizures.
In 1997, an Ontario court gave Terry Parker permission to smoke
marijuana free of prosecution.  But Ottawa lawyers are arguing
that this permission usurps federal authority; Mr. Parker should
make application to the health minister like the others.

On both sides of the border, legal supply of the drug is an issue.

"People didn't pass Proposition 215 with the thought of sick
people having to go downtown to a dark alley to buy their
medicine," says Rand Martin, chief of staff for California State
Sen.  John Vasconcellos.  The senator has introduced legislation
to set up a registry of people with legal permission for medicinal
marijuana.  If the system is implemented, a police officer would
be able to check on someone's marijuana status as easily as he
could check on outstanding parking tickets.

Yet people allowed to use medicinal marijuana are often too ill
to grow their own.  And because marijuana is a plant and not a
manufactured product like aspirin, there's not an obvious role for
pharmaceutical companies to play, observes Eugene Oscapella, an
Ottawa lawyer and a founding member of the Canadian Drug Policy
Foundation.

But if restrictions on medicinal marijuana were relaxed as fully
as advocates would like, marijuana could be as widely used, he
suggests, as an over-the-counter painkiller.

Buyers' Clubs

It is in this void that "buyers' clubs" have developed, such as
the Compassion Club of Vancouver, a registered charity set up to
supply seriously ill people with marijuana.  In Canada these
clubs have generally worked out a modus vivendi with the police.

In California, activists in such organizations have been
prosecuted.  Boje, a graphic artist, says she was working with
Mr. McCormick to establish a buyers' club in southern California
when she was arrested.  She has insisted that because of the new
law and because McCormick had prescriptions for marijuana, their
activities were legal.  Pretrial motions in McCormick's trial
were to begin yesterday in California.

Conroy expects to lose the Nov.  1 hearing but to appeal to
Canada's federal justice minister.  Boje "is in fear of what
will be done to her" if she goes to a US prison.  Amnesty
International released a report earlier this year about human
rights violations against women in prison, which attracted
widespread attention here.  The levels of abuse reported are
a reason to consider the American justice system "unjust and
oppressive," according to Conroy.

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