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posted by martyb on Friday June 01 2018, @07:51PM   Printer-friendly
from the smoking-stopped-son's-seizures-so-son-siezed dept.

They Let Their 15-Year-Old Son Smoke Pot to Stop His Seizures. Georgia Took Him Away. (archive)

The pharmaceuticals weren't working. The 15-year-old boy was having several seizures per day, and his parents were concerned his life was in danger. So Suzeanna and Matthew Brill, of Macon, Ga., decided in February to let their son try smoking marijuana — and his seizures stopped for 71 days, they say.

The Brills' decision led to the boy, David, being taken away from his parents, who face possible fines and jail time after being charged with reckless conduct for giving him the drug. David has now been in a group home for 30 days, and his seizures have returned. He is separated from the service dog that sniffed out his seizures, and he is able to communicate with his parents only during short visitations and phone calls.

They maintain they made the right decision for their son's health, despite their current predicament. "Even with the ramifications with the law, I don't care," said Mr. Brill, his stepfather. "For 71 days he was able to ride a bike, go play, lift weights. We were able to achieve that with David medicated not from Big Pharma, but David medicated with marijuana."

The Brill parents were jailed on April 20, and posted bond on April 25.

Since The New York Times published the article, Twiggs County Sheriff Darren Mitchum has received media attention and threatening phone calls, one of which he played back for reporters at a press conference.


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  • (Score: 3, Informative) by Arik on Saturday June 02 2018, @02:04PM (1 child)

    by Arik (4543) on Saturday June 02 2018, @02:04PM (#687671) Journal
    William Penn had a similar story. He clearly broke the law, but the law was clearly wrong. The judge tried to pressure the jury to convict, but they refused. He imprisoned the jurors, who refused to cow, and eventually won their case. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bushel%27s_Case - a common precedent inherited by both Canada and the USA as part of common law.
    --
    If laughter is the best medicine, who are the best doctors?
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  • (Score: 2) by dry on Saturday June 02 2018, @04:43PM

    by dry (223) on Saturday June 02 2018, @04:43PM (#687730) Journal

    Yes, I was going to mention that case in response to, IIRC, a different comment of yours.
    It's interesting how the common law has evolved.