Pubdate: Tue, 29 Feb 2000 Source: Canberra Times (Australia) Copyright: 2000 Canberra Times Contact: http://www.canberratimes.com.au/ Author: Roderick Campbell COURT UPHOLDS JAIL SENTENCE FOR WATSON'S ROLE IN ACT DRUG RING Drugs campaigner turned drug dealer Marion Watson has failed to convince the Full Federal Court that two years in jail for selling $28,000 worth of heroin a week is an excessive penalty. In a 3-0 ruling yesterday, the court dismissed 47-year-old Watson's appeal against the four-year sentence, incorporating a two-year non-parole period, imposed by the ACT Supreme Court last year. While concluding that the sentence was, in fact, somewhat lenient, Justices Murray Wilcox, Marcus Einfeld and Susan Kenny dismissed a Crown appeal against its leniency. Watson had not disputed that she was part of a sophisticated drug ring and admitted selling heroin for 4-5 months before her arrest on Christmas Eve 1998. It was not disputed that she ran the ring's night-shift four days a week and was selling about $28,000 worth of heroin a week, in part to support her drug habit. Watson's appeal was based on alleged errors on the part of the sentencing judge relating to the risk that she would reoffend, given that she had tested positive to illicit drugs while on bail, and the degree to which she was remorseful and a good candidate for rehabilitation. She also said the sentence she had received was excessive compared with that of her coaccused. The Federal Court judges rejected the suggestion that the Supreme Court had not been entitled to take a negative view of the unexplained presence of drugs in Watson's blood. The judges thought the court had also been entitled to conclude that Watson had been reluctant to enter a drug-rehabilitation program and that her view was that there was "no social harm in selling drugs to drug-dependent people". They rejected the claim that Watson's rehabilitation should have been the controlling factor in the sentencing process. Having regard to the offences themselves and the circumstances under which they were committed, "this was a case that called for an immediate custodial sentence", they said. - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson