Oct 15, 2024 8:06 PM - Connect Newsroom - Jasmine Singh with files from The Canadian Press

The co-founders of a Vancouver-based “compassion club” that distributed small quantities of heroin, cocaine, and methamphetamine say their Charter rights - and those of drug users - were violated when their organization was shut down and they were arrested earlier this year.
Eris Nyx and Jeremy Kalicum, founders of the Drug User Liberation Front (DULF), have filed a constitutional challenge in B.C. Supreme Court, arguing that closing their compassion club has deprived members of a safe, predictable drug supply and forced them back into the toxic and often lethal street market.
Their court filing claims that the shutdown violated Section 7 of the Charter, which protects the right to life, liberty, and security of the person, and Section 15, which guarantees equality before the law. “Denying access to a tested, controlled drug supply for people with serious addictions - while exposing them to the poisoned street supply - is grossly disproportionate,” the document argues.
The group says its drug-checking site had been authorized by Vancouver Coastal Health to collect, store, and test illicit substances for contamination, and therefore their criminal charges for possession for the purpose of trafficking are unjustified.
The case has reignited a political and public debate in B.C. over harm reduction, decriminalization, and public safety. The governing NDP and Opposition BC United have sparred over how far the province should go in supporting safe supply programs, which remain deeply divisive among residents - including members of South Asian and newcomer communities in Surrey and Abbotsford, where concerns about drug use and youth safety have been rising.
If successful, the court challenge could become a landmark case shaping the limits of harm reduction policy and criminal law in Canada.
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