News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: Pot Growers' Names Will Be Supplied |
Title: | Canada: Pot Growers' Names Will Be Supplied |
Published On: | 2003-07-11 |
Source: | Ottawa Sun (CN ON) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-20 01:59:26 |
POT GROWERS' NAMES WILL BE SUPPLIED
Solicitor General Wayne Easter vowed yesterday to ensure police officers
get the names of Canadians authorized to grow pot so they're not targeted
in drug raids.
Easter, who has witnessed firsthand drug raids at marijuana grow
operations, told the Sun he was unaware police were not being provided that
information, but insisted he will be "talking to his counterparts" about it.
Currently there are 582 Canadians authorized to have pot for medicinal
purposes, 413 of them licensed to grow the weed.
"It's obviously something that we have to find a way to address ... it's an
issue that is absolutely going to be addressed one way or another. We've
got to respect privacy but ... we don't want the overburden on privacy to
put at risk someone's life," Easter said. "I've seen how some of these
marijuana grow operations are taken down and if an individual is provoked
and somebody went in guns blazing ... then we'd have great difficulties."
RCMP Staff Sgt. Marc Pinault, the national co-ordinator of the marijuana
grow operation squad, is pleased Easter will take action.
Pinault said efforts over many months to convince Health Canada to hand
over a list of names have gone nowhere.
In at least four cases over the last several months, police have raided
operations run by government-licensed growers.
Solicitor General Wayne Easter vowed yesterday to ensure police officers
get the names of Canadians authorized to grow pot so they're not targeted
in drug raids.
Easter, who has witnessed firsthand drug raids at marijuana grow
operations, told the Sun he was unaware police were not being provided that
information, but insisted he will be "talking to his counterparts" about it.
Currently there are 582 Canadians authorized to have pot for medicinal
purposes, 413 of them licensed to grow the weed.
"It's obviously something that we have to find a way to address ... it's an
issue that is absolutely going to be addressed one way or another. We've
got to respect privacy but ... we don't want the overburden on privacy to
put at risk someone's life," Easter said. "I've seen how some of these
marijuana grow operations are taken down and if an individual is provoked
and somebody went in guns blazing ... then we'd have great difficulties."
RCMP Staff Sgt. Marc Pinault, the national co-ordinator of the marijuana
grow operation squad, is pleased Easter will take action.
Pinault said efforts over many months to convince Health Canada to hand
over a list of names have gone nowhere.
In at least four cases over the last several months, police have raided
operations run by government-licensed growers.
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