Pubdate: Sat, 12 Mar 2005 Source: National Post (Canada) Copyright: 2005 Southam Inc. Contact: http://www.nationalpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286 Author: Cristin Schmitz, with files from Shannon Kari, CanWest News Service Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing) MPS CALL FOR TOUGH LINE ON GROW-OP SENTENCES Lawyers' Doubts OTTAWA - Growing support among MPs of different political stripes for tough mandatory minimum sentences to deter marijuana grow operations, usually run by organized gangs, could lead to amendments to the Liberals' marijuana bill, predicts Conservative justice critic Vic Toews. The cannabis bill before the Commons justice committee for study would double the maximum punishment for grow ops with more than 50 plants to 14 years from seven years. But Mr. Toews said the Conservatives will likely table amendments in the committee in the coming weeks that would require judges to impose a penalty of at least two years in prison. He said he believes stiffening the penalties could garner support from Bloc Quebecois MPs because of the proven link between organized crime and marijuana grow ops. The political rumblings in Ottawa came despite protests from criminal defence attorneys in Toronto who rejected the claims that grow ops were synonymous with organized crime and violence. Mr. Toews noted the deaths of four RCMP officers last week has prompted many MPs to rethink whether mandatory penalties could deter drug-related crimes. Mandatory minimum penalties must be created infrequently because they take away judges' discretion to tailor individual sentences appropriately to fit the crime, said Bloc Quebecois justice critic Richard Marceau. But both he and NDP House leader Libby Davies, her party's spokesperson on marijuana, said they are open to hearing arguments in favour of mandatory minimums, although Davies said she is skeptical that they work. Outside the Commons, Justice Minister Irwin Cotler said he is open to persuasion but for now he is sticking to his position that such sentences are counterproductive because they lead to more plea bargaining and are often treated as ceilings, rather than as floors, by trial judges. "I have looked at all the evidence and all the studies, and they have not persuaded me that mandatory minimums are either effective or necessary ... however well-intentioned the people who recommend them may be, that they may achieve the very opposite of what they wish." Liberal MP Dan McTeague, his party's strongest proponent of mandatory minimum sentences for marijuana grow operations, said he believes other Liberal MPs would vote in favour of amendments to hike the bill's sentences. "I think the public expects us to be able to nip this in the bud, and remove judicial discretion which currently ignores the seven-year maximum (sentence) in favour of trivial, and frankly dangerously light, sentences," he argued. In Toronto however, many in the legal community say the claim by politicians and police that grow-ops are vehicles for violent and sophisticated organized crime groups is a "cheap shot" that does not stand up to "10 minutes of fact checking." Numerous lawyers who defend these cases in court suggested Public Security Minister Anne McLellan is misleading the public about the dangers of grow-ops with her recent comments in the wake of the Alberta RCMP murders. "Anne McLellan does not live in the real world. She just does not know what is going on," said Toronto defence lawyer Peter Zaduk. "The judges who hear these cases routinely have a much better handle on the reality of the situation than the minister does." "For a former justice minister, who should know better, to criticize the judiciary on this issue, is both a cheap shot and it is dead wrong," said Vancouver defence lawyer Neil Cobb. The two experienced lawyers have defended hundreds of grow-op cases in British Columbia and Ontario, and they say the evidence in court never matches up to the "myths" spread by politicians and the police. It is inaccurate to suggest that raiding grow-ops is a high risk procedure for police, said Mr. Cobb. "I have had hundreds of cases. I can't recall one with a violent struggle," said Cobb. "I have never seen violence in my grow-op cases, except for the violence meted out by police," said Kelowna, B.C., lawyer Stanley Tessmer, adding that he hasn't seen any real evidence that organized crime groups are the real force behind grow-ops in Canada. "There is no Mr. Big. You can call it organized crime when there are two people, but the bulk of these things involve independent operators," said Mr. Tessmer. While he conceded there are "loose networks" involved in marijuana production, he stressed "they are not the Mafia or the Hells Angels." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom