News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: Officer, I'd Like To Report Some Stolen Marijuana |
Title: | Canada: Officer, I'd Like To Report Some Stolen Marijuana |
Published On: | 2003-07-19 |
Source: | National Post (Canada) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-24 19:29:39 |
OFFICER, I'D LIKE TO REPORT SOME STOLEN MARIJUANA
TORONTO - A young woman called police yesterday to report she had been
robbed of $20 worth of marijuana in what is believed to be the first such
case since an Ontario judge said possession of less than 30 grams of pot is
no longer illegal.
York Regional Police say they are taking the case seriously and will do
their best to retrieve the 18-year-old's stolen property.
"We've never had someone call us before and say, 'Someone stole my
marijuana,'" Constable Steve Morrell said.
"But kids obviously feel comfortable enough to do that now."
The woman told police she was hanging out in a schoolyard in Thornhill, an
affluent suburb of Toronto, when two teenage boys on mountain bikes
approached and asked if she had any marijuana.
She produced two small bags the young men quickly snatched away. When she
tried to grab the bags back, one of the teenagers said he had a handgun,
according to the police report.
"We are investigating. A crime was committed. We don't have the option of
saying one type of crime is not important to us."
Police say they have noticed an increase in marijuana smoking among teens
since Ontario Superior Court Justice Steven Rogin upheld a lower court
decision acquitting a 15-year-old boy of marijuana possession on May 16.
Judge Rogin found there was no law banning possession of the previously
illegal substance because of the federal government's failure to comply with
a July, 2000, ruling by the provincial Court of Appeal.
The federal government initially insisted possession of marijuana was still
prohibited, but reversed that position a week later and introduced new
legislation that would result in fines, instead of criminal sanctions, for
possession of small amounts. But the changes are unlikely to become law
until next year.
Const. Morrell could not say for sure what will happen if police retrieve
the young woman's two little bags of pot.
"We'll have to cross that bridge when we come to it," he said. "If its
someone's property, I don't know what legal right we have to hold onto it,
unless it's for evidentiary purposes."
Const. Morrell noted that police can confiscate beer if they catch teenagers
drinking in public, but says no law exists that allows them to confiscate
marijuana.
TORONTO - A young woman called police yesterday to report she had been
robbed of $20 worth of marijuana in what is believed to be the first such
case since an Ontario judge said possession of less than 30 grams of pot is
no longer illegal.
York Regional Police say they are taking the case seriously and will do
their best to retrieve the 18-year-old's stolen property.
"We've never had someone call us before and say, 'Someone stole my
marijuana,'" Constable Steve Morrell said.
"But kids obviously feel comfortable enough to do that now."
The woman told police she was hanging out in a schoolyard in Thornhill, an
affluent suburb of Toronto, when two teenage boys on mountain bikes
approached and asked if she had any marijuana.
She produced two small bags the young men quickly snatched away. When she
tried to grab the bags back, one of the teenagers said he had a handgun,
according to the police report.
"We are investigating. A crime was committed. We don't have the option of
saying one type of crime is not important to us."
Police say they have noticed an increase in marijuana smoking among teens
since Ontario Superior Court Justice Steven Rogin upheld a lower court
decision acquitting a 15-year-old boy of marijuana possession on May 16.
Judge Rogin found there was no law banning possession of the previously
illegal substance because of the federal government's failure to comply with
a July, 2000, ruling by the provincial Court of Appeal.
The federal government initially insisted possession of marijuana was still
prohibited, but reversed that position a week later and introduced new
legislation that would result in fines, instead of criminal sanctions, for
possession of small amounts. But the changes are unlikely to become law
until next year.
Const. Morrell could not say for sure what will happen if police retrieve
the young woman's two little bags of pot.
"We'll have to cross that bridge when we come to it," he said. "If its
someone's property, I don't know what legal right we have to hold onto it,
unless it's for evidentiary purposes."
Const. Morrell noted that police can confiscate beer if they catch teenagers
drinking in public, but says no law exists that allows them to confiscate
marijuana.
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