Pubdate: Fri, 20 Jun 2008 Source: Miramichi Leader (CN NK) Copyright: 2008 Brunswick News Inc. Contact: http://miramichileader.canadaeast.com/onsite.php?page=contact Website: http://miramichileader.canadaeast.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4756 PUNISHMENT SHOULD FIT THE CRIME So convicted drug trafficker Matt Amos is going to appeal his six-year sentence. Good for him. We hope the Appeals Court reviews the evidence carefully - and increases the sentence: doubles or triples it, if it can. Amos was described during his trial as possibly being the first drug dealer to introduce crystal meth to this province. Although at a convenient moment prior to his sentencing, he did utter the appropriate words (albeit even as he attempted to minimize what he did) - "I didn't see the bottom-end of the effect on people. But I did traffic 'mostly' in marijuana" - it's obvious he has no concept of just what he has done. At the sentencing hearing, RCMP Sgt. Steve Gordeau testified that until methamphetamine was intercepted in courier packages addressed to Amos from British Columbia in late 2004 and early 2005, there had been no seizures of crystal meth in the province. "This is the first individual we investigated and made a seizure of crystal meth," Gordeau said. Gordeau testified the drugs Amos was trafficking included three of the worst drugs police see in the province. At trial, and again at the sentence hearing, the court heard Amos was a high-level dealer who had access to a steady supply of methamphetamine, cocaine and ecstsy, not to mention the hundreds of "weeks of work" of marijuana. "Based on my experience, Paul Black and Matt Amos were at the highest level to have some of the hardest drugs on the market," said Gordeau. Anyone who has seen what crystal meth and cocaine can do to a person physically over time knows the full horror of these evil and highly addictive substances, and anyone who stays abreast of the news knows of the deaths among teenagers who fall victim to the wiles of the "fun" drug ecstasy. It's typical of the self-absorbed narcissistic character trait it takes to be able to deal in drugs in the first place that Amos and his charming little band of fellow thugs rounded up in Operation Jackpot really have no inkling of the extent of the suffering they are responsible for. To help re-educate them as to the full extent of their wrong-doing, we feel the sentences imposed for drug trafficking should be the harshest possible. As it is, Amos' six-year sentence will see him out of prison in a year with good behaviour, in effect making a mockery of the whole notion of punishment fitting the crime. And Amos knows this. His indignant warnings about appealing as he was led away serve only to further illustrate the true extent of his smug, warped view of the world. The only way to deter the Amos's of this world and other such blackguards is to make sure the punishment for plying their ill begotten trades packs sufficient wallop to truly deter them. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath