Pubdate: Wed, 28 Mar 2007 Source: North Shore News (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 North Shore News Contact: http://www.nsnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/311 Author: Jerry Paradis Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) A FINE CAN BE FINE FOR THE CRIME On Jan. 19, the B.C. Court of Appeal overturned a sentence imposed in a marijuana grow-op case. A provincial court judge had found that a $20,000 fine would best address the root of the offence: the prospect of huge profits in a black market. The Court of Appeal thought differently and sentenced the accused to a year in jail. The three-judge panel concluded that the fine did not properly meet two principles of sentencing: denunciation of the unlawful conduct and deterrence of others. Although courts continue to repeat incantations like "denunciation" and "deterrence" as if they're conducting an exorcism, where drugs are concerned - especially marijuana - it is not so easy to be delivered from evil. The reason for the losing struggle is the erosion of broad support for the law itself, something absolutely essential for the meaningful application of those principles. It's pretty hard to denounce conduct that the public has long treated with a wink and a nudge. Our criminal law - the reflection of our collective values - has often found itself facing that problem. The first Criminal Code was enacted in 1892 and most would cringe today at some of its prohibitions: homosexuality, of course, but also contraception, gambling and homelessness. In short, it sought to establish criminal sanctions for conduct that was perceived to be detrimental to the moral fibre of society. What it overlooked was the inherent immorality of criminalizing conduct that was harmless to others. As recently as 1967 (to those my age, that's recent), the Supreme Court of Canada upheld a sentence of indefinite imprisonment for Everett Klippert, a 40-year old man found to be a "dangerous sexual offender." His dangerous sexual conduct? Consensual sex with other adult males, then known as "gross indecency." His sentence played an important part in Pierre Trudeau's famous declaration that the state has no place in the bedrooms of the nation. To be fair, that law was scrapped in 1969 less because of a broad shift in public attitude than because of the determination of a government to do away with something manifestly unjust. But there is no doubt that public attitudes were changing rapidly. That same criminal law amendment bill in 1969 legalized contraception, the government again recognizing that the law was being honoured far more in its breach - more than 50 million contraceptives were being purchased annually across the country, at clinics and under the counter at drugstores. Shortly after, the vagrancy laws, long-standing tools in the regulation of the unsightliness of poverty and prostitution, were also gutted, the government finally acknowledging that they were fundamentally an excuse to conduct an arbitrary exercise in social Darwinism. Meanwhile, gambling has become a national pastime and a significant source of public revenue. As with drugs today, there was a time when courts sincerely tried to "denounce" such conduct and to deter people from engaging in it. But at the trial level, judges mostly tried to temper their effect, finding ways to do their duty without too much denunciation. Not unlike the Klippert case, a 1967 judgement of the B.C. Court of Appeal (R. v. Adelman), said that it was "vital to the community as a whole that the use of marijuana be stamped out" and that "the widespread disregard of the law prohibiting . . . marijuana must be stopped and it is the duty of the courts to do all they can to assist in stopping it." It overruled a suspended sentence imposed at trial and substituted six months in jail for a university student with no previous record who was caught with a small amount of pot. It took about a year for lower courts to find ways to impose less draconian punishment. Which is precisely what is going on in almost all courtrooms today on those rare occasions that a simple possession of pot case shows up. The drug was a centrepiece of the cultural upheaval of the '60s. The ubiquity of the weed was such that as time went on, much of the themes and lyrics of popular music were devoted to it. Jimmy Buffet sang wistfully of his '50s childhood when "Only jazz musicians/ Were smokin' marijuana." Cheech and Chong, those perpetually stoned pranksters, were a huge draw. Paraphernalia shops sprang up everywhere. NORML (National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws) came into being. The B.C. and Canadian Marijuana parties sprang up. Some of that might once have appeared to be on (or beyond) the fringe, but not anymore. The use of this widely sought-after substance has grown exponentially, in spite of every attempt to stamp it out. That is neither a good nor a bad thing, simply a fact of modern society. Just as bathtub gin could readily be had during alcohol prohibition, pot will remain freely available. And it makes no sense to differentiate between users and producers. The stork won't bring users what they want, nor will they find it under cabbage leaves. It is useless - and sometimes embarrassing - for appellate courts to try to "denounce" and "deter" conduct that has become so mainstream. The demand for marijuana is as enormous as the profits to be made in its production and distribution. Until the federal government comes to its senses and does away with the law, someone will always be ready to take the risk. Which is precisely where the courts can and should hang their hats when looking for something to denounce. The conduct that is reprehensible is the reaping of those profits in a black market while other, law-abiding people earn their way with a lot more work and a lot less return. And it would seem that a large financial penalty would be a reasonable way to go about it. We pay large amounts for grow-op investigations and the trials that result from them. Why pay again for jail time or even community supervision? Let the profiteers put money back in the pot - so to speak. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin