Pubdate: Sat, 03 May 2003
Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC)
Copyright: 2003 The Vancouver Sun
Contact:  http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477
Author: Tim Naumetz, CanWest News Service

AMBASSADOR SOFTENS U.S. STANCE ON POT-LAW CHANGES

But Law Must Set Harsh Penalties For Trafficking, He Says

OTTAWA -- U.S. Ambassador Paul Cellucci suggested Friday that Canada's plan 
to decriminalize possession of small amounts of marijuana may not lead to 
border friction if the change includes tough penalties for criminal 
trafficking and cultivation.

Contrary to recent warnings by other U.S. officials, including U.S. drug 
czar John Walters, Cellucci said people will have to "wait and see" whether 
such a law would lead to congestion and other problems at the Canada-U.S. 
border.

Cellucci noted several U.S. states have decriminalized the possession of 
small amounts of cannabis and said much will depend on whether the drug 
will appear easier to get if decriminalized in Canada.

"This is a decision for Canada to make, just as it was a decision for 
jurisdictions in the United States to make," Cellucci told reporters at a 
ceremony marking a new agreement on pre-clearance procedures for U.S. 
customs at airports in Canada.

"We'll have to wait and see what it [the law] is to know whether it will 
have any impact on the border," the ambassador added.

A leading U.S. criminologist said in Vancouver Friday decriminalizing 
marijuana is unlikely to have serious consequences for Canada, either from 
an increase in crime or from a disapproving United States government.

James Q. Wilson shrugged off a warning by a U.S. government official that 
Canada and the U.S. were heading for major trouble because Canada is edging 
closer to decriminalization.

Wilson, the leading conservative U.S. criminologist, said the marijuana 
dispute is between Canada and "some political leaders" in the U.S., not 
between the two countries.

He noted that a U.S. warning that decriminalization could lead to trouble 
was delivered by a relatively low-level official.

In any case, Wilson told The Vancouver Sun's editorial board, U.S. opinion 
is also shifting in the direction of decriminalization.

"We have 12 states which have in effect de-penalized marijuana," he said. 
"In the 12 states that have done so, I don't think there has been any 
significant increase in crime and disorder.

"There have been no serious consequences. I suspect that if you do it in 
Canada, you won't notice any serious consequence either."

Cellucci laughingly brushed off attempts by journalists to draw him into 
commenting on the Liberal leadership race.

Asked if he welcomed former finance minister Paul Martin's support for more 
defence spending and Canadian participation in a continental missile 
defence system, Cellucci replied with a broad smile: "We're not going to 
get into the political wars here in Canada, but we thought that was a 
positive statement from Mr. Martin, obviously."

He also had praise for John Manley's good working relationship with U.S. 
Homeland Secretary Tom Ridge.

Top U.S. officials have predicted border tie-ups if Canada eases laws on 
marijuana. Although some U.S. states have made possession a misdemeanour, 
it remains a federal offence to transport the drug across the U.S. border.

Cellucci, however, said no one can predict what will happen.

"I think a lot depends, and no one has seen the proposal yet, does it 
actually make it more difficult to get marijuana?" he added. "Is the 
enforcement of the civil penalty going to be a strong one? Are the criminal 
penalties for those who grow marijuana, are they going to be strengthened?"

The ambassador went on to say: "I think it comes down to perception, if the 
perception is that it might be more easy to get marijuana here, then that 
could lead to some pressure on the border because U.S. customs and 
immigration officers are law enforcement officers and they would have their 
antennae up as people are travelling from Canada into the United States."

Criminologist Wilson dismissed U.S. concerns that B.C.-grown marijuana is 
seen as a problem south of the border.

"The United States is producing lots of marijuana on private property," he 
said. "I doubt we have to depend on imports from Canada."

Later Friday, in a speech to the Fraser Institute, Wilson joked that much 
of northern California is devoted to growing marijuana and the U.S. doesn't 
need to rely on B.C. bud.

Justice Minister Martin Cauchon, arguing thousands of young Canadians 
should not be saddled with criminal records for using small amounts of 
marijuana, has promised to introduce a bill by June decriminalizing 
possession of 30 grams or less of pot. He has also indicated the government 
would launch a new strategy on drugs and toughen enforcement against 
growers and traffickers.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration and other agencies in Washington have 
already singled Canada out as a source of marijuana and other drug 
shipments to the U.S.

In Canada, judges in three provinces, Ontario, Nova Scotia and Prince 
Edward Island have recently tossed out marijuana possession charges because 
of Ottawa's plans for a new law. The federal justice department, which is 
drafting Cauchon's bill to decriminalize pot, is also appealing the 
provincial court rulings.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom