Rave Radio: Offline (0/0)
Email: Password:
Anonymous
New Account
Forgot Password
News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: Pot Is 'Currency' For Harder Drugs
Title:Canada: Pot Is 'Currency' For Harder Drugs
Published On:2009-04-23
Source:Vancouver Sun (CN BC)
Fetched On:2009-04-24 02:15:24
POT IS 'CURRENCY' FOR HARDER DRUGS

Conservatives Push Mandatory Prison Sentences for Drug Crimes -- Even
for Growing As Little As One Marijuana Plant

Canada's justice minister says people who sell or grow marijuana
belong in jail because pot is used as a "currency" to bring harder
drugs into the country.

"This lubricates the business and that makes me nervous," Rob
Nicholson said to the Commons justice committee Wednesday as he faced
tough questions about a controversial bill to impose automatic jail
and prison sentences for drug crimes, including growing as little as
one pot plant.

"Marijuana is the currency that is used to bring other more serious
drugs into the country."

Canada's Controlled Drugs and Substances Act currently contains no
mandatory prison sentences and judges use their discretion about
whether to send drug pushers and growers to jail.

The Conservatives have proposed legislation that would impose one-year
mandatory jail time for marijuana dealing, when it is linked to
organized crime or a weapon is involved.

The sentence would be increased to two years for dealing drugs such as
cocaine, heroin or methamphetamines to young people, or trafficking
drugs near a school or other places frequented by youths.

The proposed legislation would impose six months for growing one to
200 marijuana plants to sell, and two years for growers of 500 plants
or more.

The bill is arguably the most controversial piece of justice
legislation introduced by the Conservative and critics have warned
that, if passed, it could flood prisons and jails.

Opposition critics voiced concerns that a crackdown would not only
target big-time dealers, but it would send drug addicts to provincial
prisons, which have few treatment programs in place.

B.C. New Democrat Libby Davies repeatedly grilled Nicholson on whether
he has any evidence that minimum mandatory jail terms reduce crime.

Davies cited studies prepared for the Justice Department several years
ago showing that automatically jailing drug criminals does nothing to
deter crime, as has been shown in the United States.

"Many states are repealing their mandatory minimums," Davies
said.

Nicholson declined to supply any evidence to the contrary, but he
insisted that "we are absolutely convinced in our consultation with
Canadians that this is welcomed across the country."

There are already more than two dozen minimum prison terms in the
Criminal Code, mainly for murder and offences involving firearms.

Nicholson also faced questioning from the Bloc Quebecois on why the
Conservatives want to impose minimum jail terms for marijuana, when
many of the people who sell it and grow it are small-time criminals.

The move to jail pot pushers and growers "sends a strong message" that
is a far cry from an initiative of the former Liberal government to
decriminalize marijuana possession, Nicholson said.

As a result of the Liberal actions, Canadians remain confused about
the legal status of smoking marijuana, he said.
Member Comments
No member comments available...