News (Media Awareness Project) - CN ON: Feds Ponder Amendments To Marijuana Legislation |
Title: | CN ON: Feds Ponder Amendments To Marijuana Legislation |
Published On: | 2003-10-14 |
Source: | Guelph Mercury (CN ON) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-19 09:16:51 |
FEDS PONDER AMENDMENTS TO MARIJUANA LEGISLATION
The federal government may lower the amount of "personal use" pot it will
tolerate and slightly toughen provisions of its marijuana decriminalization
bill in a bid to win over some of its staunch critics, including those on
its own backbench.
Sources say amendments under consideration include: Lowering to 10 grams
from 15 grams the amount of pot a person may possess before facing a
potential criminal conviction and record; increasing penalties for "repeat
offenders" who clearly flout the ban on pot; and imposing mandatory minimum
sentences on large-scale growing operations.
Right now, the pot bill "de-criminalizes" the penalty for simple possession
proposing, instead of a criminal sanction, a ticketing scheme with fines
from $250 to $400.
The insider emphatically denied any move to impose a stricter limit is a
move to allay concerns by Americans, saying many of the arguments the
United States presents about stronger strains of marijuana are "a myth."
The federal government may lower the amount of "personal use" pot it will
tolerate and slightly toughen provisions of its marijuana decriminalization
bill in a bid to win over some of its staunch critics, including those on
its own backbench.
Sources say amendments under consideration include: Lowering to 10 grams
from 15 grams the amount of pot a person may possess before facing a
potential criminal conviction and record; increasing penalties for "repeat
offenders" who clearly flout the ban on pot; and imposing mandatory minimum
sentences on large-scale growing operations.
Right now, the pot bill "de-criminalizes" the penalty for simple possession
proposing, instead of a criminal sanction, a ticketing scheme with fines
from $250 to $400.
The insider emphatically denied any move to impose a stricter limit is a
move to allay concerns by Americans, saying many of the arguments the
United States presents about stronger strains of marijuana are "a myth."
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