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He's a Healer, Not a Dealer: Rick Simpson's "Cannabis Cures Cancer" Case Settled

Man who claims his hemp oil cures cancer says he?s leaving Canada after fine for trafficking in medical pot

Rick Simpson outside court in 2007

A man who insists he has found the cure for cancer says he is leaving Canada for an unnamed country where he can live without fear of persecution or prosecution for taking and producing medicinal marijuana. "I can?t live in a country where I and others are labelled as criminals because of our medical need for this (marijuana) medication," Ricky Logan Simpson, 58, said Friday. "I?ve decided that after five years of trying to bring my medicine to the people, I don?t like the way this country is run. It seems that the health and welfare of the people means nothing to the (politicians) in Ottawa."
Mr. Simpson made the comments outside Nova Scotia Supreme Court moments after Justice Felix Cacchione fined him $2,000 and sentenced him to one day in jail, considered served by his court appearance, for producing marijuana and possessing less than three kilograms of tetrahydrocannabinol for the purpose of trafficking. Tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, is the main active ingredient in marijuana.

A charge of possessing less than 30 grams of marijuana was stayed. Mr. Simpson was given six months to pay the fine. A crowd of about 30 supporters in the courtroom applauded loudly when the sentence was handed down. As sheriff?s deputies tried to quiet them, one man yelled, "Rick Simpson is a healer, not a dealer."

Outside the courtroom, Chummy Anthony, president of the Nova Scotia Marijuana Party, held a sign bearing similar wording. He was upset that Mr. Simpson wasn?t simply given a discharge. He was yelling at the top of his lungs that "Mr. Simpson was just like Jesus Christ, because just like Jesus Christ, he was being prosecuted and persecuted for helping sick people."

A woman stood beside him holding up a DVD titled The Run from the Cure: The Rick Simpson Story. The DVD details Mr. Simpson?s court battles and his efforts ? including running in the last federal election ? to have federal medical marijuana laws changed. Mr. Simpson was seen distributing the DVD to people before his sentencing. Afterward, Mr. Simpson hugged and shook hands with supporters as he left the courtroom a free man. One man pledged that Mr. Simpson will not have to pay the fine because "all the people he?s helped will chip in money to make sure it?s paid."

A Supreme Court jury found Mr. Simpson guilty in September after a five-day trial. The charges stemmed from an RCMP raid on his Little Forks Road property on Aug. 3, 2005, that netted 1,190 marijuana plants. Mr. Simpson admitted at trial to growing marijuana on his property and using it to create a hemp oil that he claims cures everything from cankers to cancer. He distributed the hemp oil free to about 300 patients. Even after the trial ended with a guilty verdict, Mr. Simpson pledged to continue making and distributing the hemp oil. It was his contempt for the law, and the size of the marijuana seizure ? described as one of the biggest in the province ? that led Crown attorney Monica MacQueen to recommend a two-year jail sentence for Mr. Simpson. Defence lawyer Duncan Beveridge suggested an unconditional discharge, saying his client did not profit from his marijuana operation.

Justice Cacchione called the trial the most unique drug case he has ever presided over. He said he?d never heard of a drug trafficker telling police of his plans, or of a dealer who didn?t earn a profit from his trafficking. "Mr. Simpson?s actions were entirely altruistic," the judge said. "There was nothing insidious in what Mr. Simpson did." He acted out of a strongly held belief in the medicinal value of marijuana and a steadfast conviction that the hemp oil he made was helping people alleviate their suffering from a variety of ailments that prescription drugs were having little impact upon, the judge said. But he said he couldn?t grant a discharge because Mr. Simpson chose to grow marijuana and distribute his hemp oil illegally instead of participating in the federal government?s medical marijuana program. Ms. MacQueen said it was too early to say if the Crown will appeal.

Mr. Simpson?s legal woes are not over. He is to appear in Amherst provincial court on Feb. 28 to face another trafficking charge that Amherst police laid in November.

 
Marijuana: The Cure for Cancer

"A recent study found that marijuana smokers were over 75% less likely to develop cancer than non-smokers"

 

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No, that wasn’t a typing error. According to a recent study at the Craneggie College of Pennsylvania, marijuana really can prevent cancer. The study which was conducted over a period of 20 years found that marijuana smokers were over 75% less likely to develop cancer than non-smokers.

The sample used for the study consisted of 5,000 participants who smoke marijuana at least five times a week and 5,000 participants who never had contact with the substance. All 10,000 involved had a family history of cancer, with at least one parent and one grandparent who developed cancer. All participants were between the ages of 40 and 50 at the start of the study. None of the participants involved in the study were cigarette smokers. Of the 5,000 participants who did not smoke marijuana 3,127 developed some form of cancer, while only 776 of the marijuana smokers developed any signs of cancer.

Dr. Jonathan Andrews who headed the study described the results as “absolutely shocking” and that it was “possibly the greatest medical discovery since penicillin”. He also hopes that these findings will force government officials to recognize the many medicinal benefits of marijuana and reduce or eliminate the laws restricting marijuana. Dr. Andrews had this to say on the subject: “Marijuana has been outlawed for far too long. There is no reason for this prohibition aside from bureaucrat nonsense. Now maybe the lawmakers will accept the fact that these laws are not protecting people and are in fact causing people to die.”


 
Tacoma lawyer busted for pot: It was small-time

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A Tacoma lawyer arrested last week for investigation of growing and dealing pot from his law office says his operation was small-time.

The Associated Press

TACOMA, Wash. —

A Tacoma lawyer arrested last week for investigation of growing and dealing pot from his law office says his operation was small-time.

Jesse Yarbrough, a family law practitioner, told The Associated Press on Tuesday that authorities exaggerated the scope of the case and that they had incorrect information from a source that there was "a lot more going on than just a small thing."

Investigators said Friday they had found 82 growing marijuana plants and more than 7 ounces of processed marijuana, half of which was packaged for distribution, at Yarbrough's house and office. Yarbrough has not been charged.

Yarbrough's attorney, Fred Hetter of Steilacoom, says his client is a good guy and a good lawyer who apparently enjoys marijuana. Hetter says Yarbrough is worried about being disbarred or suspended, and the detectives should have better things to do than go after small-time marijuana cases.

 
Dr Reefer’s Business Goes To Pot

 

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Advocate Of Marijuana’s Medicinal Qualities Moving On After Prison Sentence

Pierre Werner and his mom, Reyna Barnett, stand Thursday in front of a billboard for Dr. Reefer, a medical marijuana referral agency operated by Barnett. Werner was recently released from prison after he was caught growing dozens of pot plants, which he says were for medical purposes.

 A couple of years back, a guy named Pierre Werner went to prison. It made the papers. It was his own fault.

The prison sentence followed Werner getting caught growing many dozens of marijuana plants in his house, which he swears he was doing for medical purposes.

The growing of the pot plants came after much pot smoking — a lot of it, he admitted, had nothing to do with the drug’s medicinal qualities.

All that pot smoking came after a prison stint in New Jersey for, well, for selling lots and lots of pot.

The Jersey time came after an episode involving nudity and an ill-fated attempt at walking from Southern California to Las Vegas.

The naked episode came after many other strange things in the life of Pierre Werner.

The latest bit of strange?

The Dr. Reefer billboard out on Decatur Boulevard near the Las Vegas Beltway in the southern end of town. It’s an ad for a business that hooks up potential marijuana smokers with a doctor who will help them do it legally.

“I’ve always considered marijuana a medicine,” said Werner, now 37 and out of prison. “Just the way it makes me feel.”

Werner got out of prison back in November. He is unemployed and lives with his mother. He’s on parole until next month, which means he’s drug tested all the time.

Werner swears he’s not smoking right now.

As soon as his parole is over, he’s leaving Nevada for good, he said. He can’t take it anymore. And besides, if he gets caught selling pot here again, he could get locked up for 20 years.

“There’s no way I’ll sell marijuana in Nevada,” he said. “I don’t even want to stay in Nevada. No thanks. Not worth it.”

He wants to go to Amsterdam, where he was born, or to California, which is more friendly to medical marijuana smokers.

Nevada’s voters legalized marijuana for medical purposes in 2000. Patients who have been diagnosed with a qualifying condition ( cancer or glaucoma, among others ) are allowed to possess small amounts of the drug.

They also are allowed to grow it for their own use.

They are not allowed to grow it for lots and lots of people and then sell it to them.

Which is where Werner got into trouble in 2004.

He was an outspoken advocate of medical marijuana then. He admitted that he was your basic recreational user before a 1998 incident in which he simply lost it, psychologically speaking.

In Southern California at the time, he decided he needed to be in Las Vegas. And so he stripped all his clothes off and began to walk.

That led, eventually, to a diagnosis: bipolar disorder. He was given lithium, which “turned me into a zombie,” he said.

However, pot fixed everything, he said.

He began operating a business in Las Vegas that helped patients connect with doctors.

He talked of opening a cannabis club, like they have in California. He grew his own pot. He also decided that he would grow pot for other patients.

That is illegal.

“My medicine was the best in the world,” he said.

According to the state Department of Health, the law for people registered in the medical marijuana program allows the possession of 1 ounce of marijuana; the possession of four mature marijuana plants; and the possession of three immature marijuana plants.

When the cops were called to Werner’s house, they found dozens of pot plants.

He went to prison.

And what of his referral business? That’s where his mother comes in.

Whenever patients would call the business while Werner was in prison, his mom would help them out. He would give her advice over the phone, from prison, on how to work the system.

Now, she operates the business, drreefer.com, full time. Werner swears he has nothing to do with it now, other than promoting it.

“It bothered me,” said Reyna Barnett, 58, Werner’s mom, when asked about his pot smoking as a young man.

She hated that he smoked pot, that he sold it, and that he went to prison for it.

And then came the bipolar diagnosis. The zombie-like lithium experience.

Marijuana seemed to fix him, Barnett said. And so she began to sympathize.

More and more, she worked with the patients that her son used to help.

“I like to help people,” she said.

What she does, for a fee, is help people fill out the necessary government paperwork.

She helps them make an appointment with a cause-friendly doctor ( any licensed doctor can prescribe marijuana in Nevada ).

Well then, just who is this sympathetic doctor, anyway?

For fear of harming the doctor’s reputation, Werner and Barnett won’t reveal any details, other than this one: It is a local pediatrician.

 
Marijuana vs Narcotics

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Since many narcotics or controlled substances are legal for medical use by prescription, there is no valid reason that marijuana should not also be legalized when used under a doctor's care. Marijuana not only reduces pain and induces relaxation but also helps increase appetite. Poor appetite is frequently an important issue with seriously ill patients.

Several studies indicate that marijuana use poses no worse risks than the resultant side effects of other medications. Smoking the substance creates the greatest potential risk, but the active ingredient in marijuana can be used in pill form.

Also, with other substances legal for purely recreational use, such as alcohol and tobacco, there is a sense of hypocrisy in keeping marijuana from people who need it for medicinal purposes. There is also no excuse for federal raids on patients using marijuana on their doctor's advice in states that have legalized medical marijuana.

Controlling or forbidding drug use is not within the federal government's enumerated powers listed in the Constitution, and should therefore be a state's rights issue per the Tenth Amendment. Each state should be able to determine its own laws on the matter, without interference from federal agencies. This is true no matter what purpose is given for decriminalizing marijuana, but especially in regard to medical use.

 


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