Pubdate: Sat, 05 Mar 2005
Source: Globe and Mail (Canada)
Copyright: 2005, The Globe and Mail Company
Contact:  http://www.globeandmail.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168
Authors: Gloria Galloway and Bill Curry
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Rochfort+Bridge (Rochfort Bridge)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

MCLELLAN PRESSES JUDICIARY ON POT SENTENCES

Grow Operators Deserve Jail Terms, Minister Says

OTTAWA -- Public Safety Minister Anne McLellan warned judges yesterday
to take marijuana laws seriously and said they will be held to account
if jail terms are not imposed on those who run grow operations.

"We are putting the onus on the courts - the judiciary, in a sense -
to take this crime seriously," Ms. McLellan said at a Liberal policy
convention in Ottawa. "This is not a victimless crime, and therefore I
think the judiciary needs to start to reflect the harsh reality of
illegal grow-ops and the consequences for our communities and society
in the sentences they hand out."

Legislation before a Commons committee demands that judges who do not
impose jail terms for aggravated drug offences must explain their
decisions in writing.

"You have to provide written reason to society, to the community in
which you live, Mr. or Madam Justice," she said. "You have to give
written reasons as to why you did not think jail time was
appropriate."

The minister's suggestion that the courts be tougher on criminals was
echoed by Colleen Myrol, the mother of Constable Brock Myrol, who was
among the four RCMP officers shot dead on Thursday during a raid on a
marijuana grow operation near Mayerthorpe, Alta.

In a statement she read in Red Deer, Alta., she urges Prime Minister
Paul Martin to "give the power back to the police. Take the power from
the Supreme Court and give it back to the House of Commons."

Tony Cannavino, president of the Canadian Professional Police
Association, which represents about 54,000 police officers across
Canada, expressed similar sentiments.

"Even if you say that the sentences were raised from 10 years to 15 or
20 years, even if we go to life imprisonment, we know that no judges
will give those sentences," Mr. Cannavino said. "So what we say is, we
need minimum sentencing. That would have a deterrent effect."

Neither Mr. Cannavino nor Ms. McLellan would agree, however, with the
suggestion that marijuana be legalized to take its distribution out of
criminal hands. The legislation would decriminalize possession of
small amounts but stop short of legalization.

Mr. Cannavino said that if pot were legalized, criminals still would
run the drug trade because they can produce a better product.

Ms. McLellan said that marijuana is too hazardous to public health to
allow on the streets, and focused on the role of the judges. "All of
us, including the judiciary, need to understand what is at stake here."

Former justice minister Martin Cauchon, no longer an MP but widely
viewed as a candidate to lead the Liberal Party, distanced himself
from Ms. McLellan's comments. "Personally, I wouldn't criticize judges
and the justice system."

The government's bill to decriminalize marijuana, which he introduced
before the election, contains the tougher penalties judges need, Mr.
Cauchon said.

Most opposition politicians were reluctant yesterday to wade into
policy issues on what clearly was a day of mourning. But some were
critical of the Liberal plan to decriminalize marijuana while clamping
down on drug producers.

"They are going to increase demand, but they are going to choke off
supply," said Bradley Trost, the Conservative MP for
Saskatoon-Humboldt. "It's going to make the suppliers even more
dangerous, even more willing to take risks, because the profit margins
will be even higher."

With two separate motions on marijuana scheduled for a debate and vote
today at the Liberal policy convention, the party's position was a hot
topic among delegates inside the Ottawa Congress Centre.

Brian Thiessen, the president of the Liberals' Alberta wing, which is
sponsoring a motion to legalize marijuana, said there is talk of
withdrawing or amending the motions because of the shootings.

"To the extent that we can modify it, be sensitive to the issues that
are out there right now, I think all options are being considered."
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake