Marijuana Activist Ready To Give Up Fight

Jim Finnel

Fallen Cannabis Warrior & Ex News Moderator
Grant Krieger says his medical marijuana activist days are over after 13 years of legal wrangling.

The Alberta Court of Appeal seems to believe him, as it overturned the Calgary man's four-month jail sentence for trafficking, suspended his sentence and placed him on probation for 18 months.

The ruling was released Tuesday.

"I'm tired of being a police target," said Krieger, 54, who uses the drug to alleviate symptoms of multiple sclerosis.

"I can still use marijuana, but police always take it away from me. I've got a court exemption to cultivate it, but it's no good because the insurance companies stepped in and won't let me grow it. I have to go to the black market now, and the last quarter-pound cost me $800."

Krieger acknowledged he started a compassion club for people suffering from various illnesses, and that through his club he has supplied the drug to many of the 430 clients.

Jordan York, a longtime friend and supporter who also suffers from MS, says he can understand why Krieger is fed up with fighting to help others when he keeps getting pushed back and criminalized by the system.

He insists the government program to give exemptions to people to grow and possess their own pot was set up to fail.

"I'm glad he's not going to jail. He doesn't deserve that. He's a hero," said York. "He's done something over the last few years that takes more courage than anyone has got.

"But as long as they keep it illegal, people who need it ( medically ) will get it and the people who give it to them are criminals."

Krieger was previously convicted of possession for the purpose of trafficking in October 1998 and January 1999.

It was that record that provincial court Judge William Pepler said forced him two years ago to impose a jail sentence on Krieger.

"The sentence imposed was responsive and appropriate to the circumstances at that time," said appellate Justices Connie Hunt, Clifton O'Brien and Peter Martin. "However, there has been significant change in circumstances since the appellant was sentenced.

"His counsel ( John Hooker ) advises that Mr. Krieger has resiled in his determination to continue to distribute marijuana to others. He will no longer defy the law, but henceforth will comply with it. The Crown has acknowledged that it would not be inappropriate for this court to take these changed circumstances into account."

The argument by the Crown has always been that Krieger supplies the drug to others, not that he grew it for himself, because his customers did not have the legal right to possess it and he was trafficking it to them without any medical training on whether it should be used.

Krieger, who was convicted after police intercepted two packages he mailed to sick people in Manitoba in 2003 and 2004, was also charged in that province.He was convicted by a Winnipeg jury last year and is scheduled to be sentenced April 8.

When those legal commitments are done, he'll be done with the law, he said.

"I don't go out of the house much anymore. I've turned into a hermit," he said. "Plus, I can't afford to fight it anymore. I'm in hock up to my eyeballs."

At Krieger's 2006 trial, his lawyer argued it was too difficult for some ill people to obtain an exemption to use the drug under the Marijuana Medical Access Regulations, and that's why he helped them.

He said those people now face the same dilemma as him, of having to find their pot on the black market.

Krieger said they can't get exemptions, in most cases, as doctors are reluctant to sign off on the treatment due to insurance concerns.

He said he was also evicted from a house for growing pot, and his daughter, with whom he now lives, won't let him do it, either, because she'll lose her insurance.


News Hawk: User: 420 MAGAZINE ® - Medical Marijuana Publication & Social Networking
Source: Calgary Herald (CN AB)
Copyright: 2009 Canwest Publishing Inc.
Contact: Calgary Herald
Website: Calgary Herald
Author: Daryl Slade
 
wow.

This was taking place in my very own city, and I had no idea about it. Thankyou for posting this up. I am going to take a much closer look at this issue. Not much (cannabis oriented) happens in Calgary, not that often anyways. So this is a pretty big deal.:thanks:
 
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