Pubdate: Wed, 05 Mar 2008 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2008 The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456 Author: Joe Fiorito HELL, A HANDBASKET AND TOUGHER DRUG LAWS Eugene Oscapella is a criminologist who teaches at the University of Ottawa. He dresses like a modern academic hipster: short leather jacket, blue shirt, dark tie, grey strides. He is also a lawyer who is sharp on the subject of drug policy. He was in town recently, speaking to front-line health and harm-reduction workers about the perils of the government's proposed crime legislation. Let me give you a tip. If Bill C-26 is enacted into law, and you own stock in companies that build jails, you stand to make a killing; prison is about to become a growth industry in Canada. Oscapella began his talk with a slide showing a handbasket and another showing an inferno, noting that hell is where we're heading in the handbasket if the new drug legislation passes. Laughter was general, if rueful, in the room. What followed was a series of trenchant remarks and bullet points. Oscapella asked, rhetorically, why people produce and sell drugs. He answered his own question by noting that a kilo of opium, worth $90 at the farm gate in Pakistan, is worth $290,000 by the time it hits the streets of North America - a 3,200 per cent increase in value, and a killer of a return. His figures may be 10 years old, but the scale of the equation has not changed. And perhaps this explains why the United States, which has the toughest drug laws on the planet, can't stem the flow of drugs; tougher laws merely make dealers richer by artificially manipulating the supply and driving up the price. What does Bill C-26 do? Among many other things, it provides mandatory minimum sentences of a year in jail for people who deal drugs on behalf of organized crime, or who use weapons or violence; two years minimum for people dealing coke, heroin or meth to kids, or for dealing drugs near schools or other places frequented by kids; and two years minimum for anyone growing at least 500 marijuana plants, with a maximum of 14 years, instead of the current seven. Oh. I see. Who sells dope near schools? Schoolkids. Has your little Johnny or Janey ever bought or sold a joint after class? Have you ever hidden a file in a cake? Speaking of the increase in penalties for running a marijuana grow-op, Oscapella was genial but withering: "Most grow-ops are mom and pop operations, and they are generally non-violent. Mom and pop might be scared off by tougher legislation, but organized crime is not dissuaded. If mom and pop go out of business, organized crime will leap into the vacuum, and organized crime is violent and dangerous." In other words, the threat of increased punishment actually makes things worse; call it the law of unintended consequences. Bill C-26 also adds "aggravating factors" in the consideration of sentencing: among these are whether the crime was committed in a prison. This provoked scorn from Oscapella: "If we can't prevent the sale of drugs in prison, how can we prevent the sale of drugs in open society?" I ask myself that all the time. And I don't know about you, but I don't want Steven Harper or his secular mullahs sending me to jail; I'd rather throw myself on the mercy of the court; alas, mandatory minimums strain the quality of mercy available to judges. Finally, Oscapella said this about harm reduction and help for drug addicts: "We don't have enough treatment for people who want it; why criminalize people before they have a chance to get treatment?" Why, indeed? If it were me, I'd spend millions to provide drug treatment on demand before I spend a lousy nickel on enforcing bad laws. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom