Pubdate: Sat, 07 Jun 2003 Source: Ottawa Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2003, Canoe Limited Partnership Contact: http://www.fyiottawa.com/ottsun.shtml Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/329 Author: Derek Abma, Ottawa Sun Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) POT OF GOLD FOR LOCAL TOKERS No Charges for Possession OTTAWA'S police chief has told his officers not to arrest or charge people for possessing less than 30 grams of marijuana. Chief Vince Bevan said in a statement yesterday he has told officers to "not arrest or issue any form of process" on individuals possessing this amount of cannabis for personal use. Bevan's move comes a day after the Ontario Association of Chiefs of Police advised police to refrain from laying charges in such cases until the courts clear up possession laws. On Tuesday, the federal Department of Justice is expected to ask the Ontario Court of Appeal to stay a decision that such possession is not illegal, made by a Windsor judge in January. The department is appealing the decision, and a court date for the appeal might also be set Tuesday. Confiscate Pot Bevan has directed officers to carry out investigations of pot possession "in accordance with established procedures." Officers are to confiscate marijuana and document investigation findings "with a view to taking the appropriate action including laying a charge(s) by summons after clarification of the law by the Court of Appeal. "If the motion (for a stay) is successful, police officers in this jurisdiction will continue to process cases as we have done in the past. If the motion is unsuccessful, we will need to await the outcome of an appeal." Bevan called on the feds to resolve the confusion with legislation if the Court of Appeal does not overrule the Windsor judge. Bevan said current plans to decriminalize pot possession of 15 grams or less will not clear up the issue. "I am concerned that in the interim, this situation is undermining public confidence in the integrity of the criminal justice system," Bevan said in the statement. Eugene Williams, director of the federal prosecution service for Ottawa-Gatineau, which is responsible for prosecuting narcotics cases, said he has no problem with Bevan's direction. Up to Police Jim Leising, federal prosecution service director for Ontario, agreed. "It is for the police to make these decisions independently as to how they want to exercise their discretion," he said, adding his organization's position is "there is still a valid prohibition." Mike Foster, owner of Crosstown Traffic, a cannabis paraphernalia store, was pleased with Bevan's directive. However, the decision won't alter how members of the cannabis community enjoy their smoky pastime. "We all kind of live our lives oblivious to government anyway," Foster added. "We smoked dope yesterday, we'll smoke dope tomorrow." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake