News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: 'They'd Still Need Me At 4am' The Dealer's View |
Title: | UK: 'They'd Still Need Me At 4am' The Dealer's View |
Published On: | 2001-07-15 |
Source: | Independent on Sunday (UK) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-25 13:47:34 |
'THEY'D STILL NEED ME AT 4AM' THE DEALER'S VIEW
In a good month, Ritchie can earn as much as a chief inspector of police.
Their bank balances might be alike, but there the similarities end. The
police officer enforces the law. Ritchie breaks it.
As a cannabis dealer, Ritchie can earn pounds1,000 a week for selling a
kilo of the drug, so long as he is not arrested first and his illicit wares
seized from his basement flat in north London. His illegal trade can still
put him behind bars for 14 years under the Misuse of Drugs Act.
However, this could all change if the cannabis legalisation lobby gets its
way, and we have packets of cannabis spliffs stacked alongside cigarettes
on the shelves of special kiosks. Dealers like Ritchie could either apply
for a government licence to sell the drug legally or continue illegally
with the risk of prosecution. There would be a system of quality control to
ensure the cannabis sold did not contain lethal additives.
Ritchie, however, is unimpressed with the idea of legalisation. Working in
a shop is a "crap job", he says, and he believes dealers would continue
selling the drug without licences. In his experience, drug users want a
smoke at all times of day and night, and the only way to make legalisation
work is to ensure that the licences allowed sellers to work whatever hours
they choose.
"People on 'come-downs' from other drugs want a smoke, and shops won't be
open at 4am. The Government can't dictate when people take drugs."
Then there is the issue of taxation. One idea put forward by pro-
legalisation groups is for duty to be paid on cannabis. But dealers such as
Ritchie claim this would create more wealth for the Government and cause
tension among successful drug criminals. "Blair is bound to put sky-high
taxes on cannabis if it was legal. Why would people go to a shop when
they'd get more for their money by coming to me?" he says.
Francis Wilkinson, former chief constable of Gwent, says a core of illegal
dealers will flourish unless there is a pricing policy and quality control.
"If a buyer can get cannabis for a competitive price in a licensed outlet,
then the illegal trade will fade away," he says.
"I have no problem with people growing it for their own consumption. It
would become the equivalent of homebrew."
In a good month, Ritchie can earn as much as a chief inspector of police.
Their bank balances might be alike, but there the similarities end. The
police officer enforces the law. Ritchie breaks it.
As a cannabis dealer, Ritchie can earn pounds1,000 a week for selling a
kilo of the drug, so long as he is not arrested first and his illicit wares
seized from his basement flat in north London. His illegal trade can still
put him behind bars for 14 years under the Misuse of Drugs Act.
However, this could all change if the cannabis legalisation lobby gets its
way, and we have packets of cannabis spliffs stacked alongside cigarettes
on the shelves of special kiosks. Dealers like Ritchie could either apply
for a government licence to sell the drug legally or continue illegally
with the risk of prosecution. There would be a system of quality control to
ensure the cannabis sold did not contain lethal additives.
Ritchie, however, is unimpressed with the idea of legalisation. Working in
a shop is a "crap job", he says, and he believes dealers would continue
selling the drug without licences. In his experience, drug users want a
smoke at all times of day and night, and the only way to make legalisation
work is to ensure that the licences allowed sellers to work whatever hours
they choose.
"People on 'come-downs' from other drugs want a smoke, and shops won't be
open at 4am. The Government can't dictate when people take drugs."
Then there is the issue of taxation. One idea put forward by pro-
legalisation groups is for duty to be paid on cannabis. But dealers such as
Ritchie claim this would create more wealth for the Government and cause
tension among successful drug criminals. "Blair is bound to put sky-high
taxes on cannabis if it was legal. Why would people go to a shop when
they'd get more for their money by coming to me?" he says.
Francis Wilkinson, former chief constable of Gwent, says a core of illegal
dealers will flourish unless there is a pricing policy and quality control.
"If a buyer can get cannabis for a competitive price in a licensed outlet,
then the illegal trade will fade away," he says.
"I have no problem with people growing it for their own consumption. It
would become the equivalent of homebrew."
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