Pubdate: Sat, 18 Mar 2000 Source: Nunatsiaq News (Canada) Copyright: 2000 Nortext Publishing Corporation Contact: Box 8, Iqaluit, NT XOA OHO Canada Fax: (867) 979-4763 Website: http://www.nunatsiaq.com/ Forum: http://www.nunanet.com/politics/index.html Author: Jane George KUGLUKTUK COUNCIL SAYS SENTENCES TOO LENIENT Kugluktuk's Hamlet Council Says They Are Getting No Help From The Court System In Cleaning Up The Community's Program. IQALUIT - Hamlet officials, RCMP members and residents of Kugluktuk are outraged over the sentences two drug dealers received last week. Last Thursday Nunavut court justice Beverly Browne gave Colin Nick Junior Adjun, 34, an eight-month conditional sentence for a drug-related offense. Adjun was arrested in Yellowknife on July 9, 1999 and charged with possession for the intent of trafficking after he was found with 228 grams of marijuana on his body. This quantity of marijuana has a street value of $20,000 in Kugluktuk. Harold (aka Maffa) Anablak, 22, received a one-day jail sentence and a $1150 fine for possession of seven joints of marijuana and around $200 in cash found on him last year. Anablak fulfilled the jail sentenc during his short detainment as he waited for his court appearance. "He walked out of the courtroom laughing," said RCMP constable Mark Crowther. "He wasn't upset, despite a courtroom full of people with their jaws on the floor." Crowther said local drug dealers had reportedly been "running scared" before the court judgment. "Kugluktuk has a drug trafficking battle," Crowther said. "We're working very hard here. We're putting the charges into the court, so it's very frustrating. You spend hundreds of hours and then they get to court and you have Kugluktuk standing behind you and then the sentence is handed down. There's the disappointment." On Monday, Kugluktuk's hamlet council passed a resolution condemning the court's apparent approval of drug trafficking in the community. The council intends to send a letter of complaint to Nunavut's Department of Justice. "As community leaders, we're trying hard to show our kids it's not right to do drugs or bootleg, and the judge is saying it's okay," Kugluktuk Mayor Joanne Taptuna said. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart