Pubdate: Thu, 09 Oct 2003 Source: Sault Star, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2003 The Sault Star Contact: http://www.saultstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1071 Author: Frank Dobrovnik Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmjcn.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal - Canada) SAULT POLICE WILL ENFORCE MARIJUANA POSSESSION LAW Local News - Five months of penalty-free marijuana possession in Ontario has come to a close, for the time being anyway. Effective immediately, Sault Ste. Marie Police Service will lay possession charges under Sec. 4 of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act for those who are not exempted by the federal government to consume marijuana. "We will advise our people that it's business as usual, and will immediately enforce the law as it's currently written," said police chief Bob Davies, following Tuesday's ruling by the Ontario Court of Appeal. The court struck down several sections of the federal Marijuana Medical Access Regulations as unconstitutional, thereby making it easier for sick people to get safe, consistent access to marijuana. The decision also effectively clarified the difference between consumption for medicinal use -- legal, once a person is sanctioned by the federal government -- and recreational use, which is once again illegal. Police throughout Ontario abandoned laying possession charges for small amounts -- typically, less than 30 grams -- after a Superior Court of Ontario Justice upheld a lower court ruling throwing out a Windsor teen's drug charges on May 16. The judge said there was no legal basis to ban simple possession since Ottawa failed to comply with a 2000 order to create new pot laws. City police are taking direction from the Ontario Association of Chiefs of Police. The Sault-based OACP forwarded talking points to members Tuesday explaining that, "The offence is now constitutionally valid and of full force and effect" and Ontario police "will immediately resume enforcement of the law as it is currently written." But the OACP cautions the ruling has no retroactive application prior to Tuesday. Back in the spring, the association directed police to seize evidence pending legal clarification, with a view to eventually laying charges. However, seizure proved unwieldy -- the May 16 decision "essentially took away our lawful authority to seize," Davies said -- and prosecution is effectively impossible now. "There shouldn't be any retroactive charges being laid," Davies said. "We wouldn't have any evidence to substantiate any offences." Police are among those watching two separate developments that will likely change legal policy again before long. The Supreme Court of Canada is expected to rule on a different case this fall that could determine the future of marijuana possession laws, and Parliament is bracing for fierce debate over proposed legislation that would soften penalties for possessing small amounts of the drug. Should possession for social or recreational use eventually be legislated into a ticketable offence or made wholly legal, Davies said, charges currently being laid will still hold up in court. "If that happens, we reassess our response, but now the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act says it's an offence to have marijuana for recreational use . . . and that has been confirmed by the Ontario Court of Appeal," he said. "Based on today's laws and the court's interpretation of the laws, we're obliged as a police service and police officers to enforce the laws that are standing today." - --- MAP posted-by: Josh