N.S. woman plans constitutional challenge of roadside cannabis test
HALIFAX — A lawyer for a Nova Scotia motorist whose licence was suspended after her saliva tested positive for cannabis says his firm will use the case to launch a constitutional challenge of Canada’s revamped impaired driving laws.
Jack Lloyd says Michelle Gray’s case shows the law is too broad and too vague, mainly because she was penalized even though police testing later determined she was not impaired.
“The argument is that you’re going to be having people lose their liberty — Michelle was arrested and her personal liberty was taken away from her — and it turned out that she was not guilty of anything,” Lloyd said in an interview Thursday.