News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: PUB LTE: Police Should Change Their Priorities |
Title: | CN BC: PUB LTE: Police Should Change Their Priorities |
Published On: | 2002-04-03 |
Source: | Victoria News (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-24 12:45:24 |
POLICE SHOULD CHANGE THEIR PRIORITIES
To the editor,
Justifying busting medicinal cannabis provider Ted Smith, sending his
chronically ill clients back to the street dealers, ("Pot advocate faces
charges," Mar 28), Victoria police Sgt. Darren Laur explained, "There is a
strong and reasonable suspicion, based upon reasonable grounds, that some
of the individuals that we're arresting for trafficking in the downtown
core have purchased from the (club)."
I am reminded of the explanation a bachelor friend once gave me for rarely
vacuuming his home. "Eventually an equilibrium is reached were as much
dirt gets tracked out as gets tracked in."
I appreciate that the police are simply doing what our ancestors asked them
to do in 1923, but cannabis was seldom seen in those days. Now our
streets, schools and communities are awash in unregulated cannabis and
compassion clubs are an improvement.
Two studies were released this week on the success of a pilot program in
Lambeth, England, in which cannabis offenders are given a warning
only. One, from the Metropolitan Police, estimates that more than 1,300
hours of police time were saved during the first six months of the program
because of the change
(http://www.met.police.uk/pns/DisplayPN.cgi?pn_id02_0010).
The second is a report of the results of a survey by the Police Foundation
of Lambeth residents, which shows strong support for the cannabis policing
scheme (http://www.police-foundation.org.uk/site/Reports.asp)
Until the federal government, or more likely the Supreme Court of Canada,
strikes down cannabis prohibition, Victoria City Council should follow
Vancouver's lead and make cannabis law enforcement their lowest priority.
Matthew M. Elrod
To the editor,
Justifying busting medicinal cannabis provider Ted Smith, sending his
chronically ill clients back to the street dealers, ("Pot advocate faces
charges," Mar 28), Victoria police Sgt. Darren Laur explained, "There is a
strong and reasonable suspicion, based upon reasonable grounds, that some
of the individuals that we're arresting for trafficking in the downtown
core have purchased from the (club)."
I am reminded of the explanation a bachelor friend once gave me for rarely
vacuuming his home. "Eventually an equilibrium is reached were as much
dirt gets tracked out as gets tracked in."
I appreciate that the police are simply doing what our ancestors asked them
to do in 1923, but cannabis was seldom seen in those days. Now our
streets, schools and communities are awash in unregulated cannabis and
compassion clubs are an improvement.
Two studies were released this week on the success of a pilot program in
Lambeth, England, in which cannabis offenders are given a warning
only. One, from the Metropolitan Police, estimates that more than 1,300
hours of police time were saved during the first six months of the program
because of the change
(http://www.met.police.uk/pns/DisplayPN.cgi?pn_id02_0010).
The second is a report of the results of a survey by the Police Foundation
of Lambeth residents, which shows strong support for the cannabis policing
scheme (http://www.police-foundation.org.uk/site/Reports.asp)
Until the federal government, or more likely the Supreme Court of Canada,
strikes down cannabis prohibition, Victoria City Council should follow
Vancouver's lead and make cannabis law enforcement their lowest priority.
Matthew M. Elrod
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