Lawyers contemplate class action to push government into cannabis amnesty
OTTAWA — At Anthony Morgan’s law office, the calls keep coming: parents of young black men hoping their son’s marijuana possession charge will be wiped clean when the country legalizes the drug this year.
The Liberal government has talked about granting amnesty for past marijuana crimes, but isn’t likely to move until after the new cannabis regime comes into effect this summer.
For black communities across the country, that’s not soon enough — and frustrated lawyers in Toronto are now considering lighting a fire under the feds with a class-action lawsuit.
“There are lawyers who are coming together to consider that as an option if the government is slow,” said Morgan, a lawyer with Falconers LLP in Toronto.


