News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: Pot Charges Soar As New Law Mulled |
Title: | Canada: Pot Charges Soar As New Law Mulled |
Published On: | 2004-02-24 |
Source: | London Free Press (CN ON) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-18 20:24:14 |
POT CHARGES SOAR AS NEW LAW MULLED
The Drug Crime Rate Reported By Police For 2002 Stands At A 20-Year High.
OTTAWA -- The federal government's plan to decriminalize pot possession
would free up millions of dollars and thousands of police hours, the latest
statistics suggest. Police laid a record number of drug-related charges in
2002 and most offences involved marijuana, Statistics Canada reported
yesterday.
Seventy-five per cent of 93,000 drug-related incidents in 2002 involved
pot. Almost three-quarters of those were possession offences, and more than
half of those convicted were fined.
"The police-reported drug crime rate has risen an estimated 42 per cent
since the early 1990s and now stands at a 20-year high," the agency said.
The numbers highlight a rift between police, who support tight enforcement
of pot laws, and more tolerant attitudes by the public, politicians and the
courts.
The statistics were released as MPs on Parliament Hill began to debate a
bill to decriminalize possession of less than 15 grams of pot, about 15 to
20 joints. Instead of a criminal record, the bill proposes fines of $100 to
$400.
The bill maintains or increases penalties for large-scale growers and
traffickers.
If passed, the bill would appear to free up police from laying most
possession charges.
Critics have long argued officers could divert investigative hours and
millions of dollars toward fighting other crime if they eased up on such
anti-drug efforts.
Law professor Alan Young, who has crusaded for reformed marijuana laws,
said at least some police forces seem to be "upping the ante" with vigilant
anti-pot enforcement that swims against the political tide.
"The entire time that this government has been talking about
decriminalization . . . the police have not adjusted their priorities in
the least."
If anything, police have logged numbers "that are good for them to
manipulate," he said in an interview from Toronto where he teaches at York
University's Osgoode Hall Law School.
The Canadian Professional Police Association, representing 54,000
rank-and-file members, declined comment yesterday. It has fought attempts
to decriminalize pot, saying police should have the discretion to do more
than issue tickets -- particularly in cases where sales are being racked up
in school yards.
Critics have also attacked plans to relax pot laws without a national drug
strategy or reliable roadside tests to snare stoned drivers.
The Drug Crime Rate Reported By Police For 2002 Stands At A 20-Year High.
OTTAWA -- The federal government's plan to decriminalize pot possession
would free up millions of dollars and thousands of police hours, the latest
statistics suggest. Police laid a record number of drug-related charges in
2002 and most offences involved marijuana, Statistics Canada reported
yesterday.
Seventy-five per cent of 93,000 drug-related incidents in 2002 involved
pot. Almost three-quarters of those were possession offences, and more than
half of those convicted were fined.
"The police-reported drug crime rate has risen an estimated 42 per cent
since the early 1990s and now stands at a 20-year high," the agency said.
The numbers highlight a rift between police, who support tight enforcement
of pot laws, and more tolerant attitudes by the public, politicians and the
courts.
The statistics were released as MPs on Parliament Hill began to debate a
bill to decriminalize possession of less than 15 grams of pot, about 15 to
20 joints. Instead of a criminal record, the bill proposes fines of $100 to
$400.
The bill maintains or increases penalties for large-scale growers and
traffickers.
If passed, the bill would appear to free up police from laying most
possession charges.
Critics have long argued officers could divert investigative hours and
millions of dollars toward fighting other crime if they eased up on such
anti-drug efforts.
Law professor Alan Young, who has crusaded for reformed marijuana laws,
said at least some police forces seem to be "upping the ante" with vigilant
anti-pot enforcement that swims against the political tide.
"The entire time that this government has been talking about
decriminalization . . . the police have not adjusted their priorities in
the least."
If anything, police have logged numbers "that are good for them to
manipulate," he said in an interview from Toronto where he teaches at York
University's Osgoode Hall Law School.
The Canadian Professional Police Association, representing 54,000
rank-and-file members, declined comment yesterday. It has fought attempts
to decriminalize pot, saying police should have the discretion to do more
than issue tickets -- particularly in cases where sales are being racked up
in school yards.
Critics have also attacked plans to relax pot laws without a national drug
strategy or reliable roadside tests to snare stoned drivers.
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