Pubdate: Fri, 03 Apr 2009 Source: Victoria News (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Black Press Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/wOQxPi2c Website: http://www.vicnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1267 Author: Rebecca Aldous Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) POT USERS SKEPTICAL BILL WILL REDUCE GANG CRIME As he dished out cash for a slim, silver scale the Sacred Herbs customer scoffed at the idea. If Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca's MP Keith Martin thinks his proposed bill decriminalizing small amounts of marijuana is going to take money out of gang member's pockets, he doesn't understand system, he said while stuffing the scale into his bag. "I fail to see any correlation there," he said, shaking his head. "People who would say that don't understand the situation." Standing behind the glass counter that holds a kaleidoscope of bright red, yellow, blue and pink glass pipes, Dan Brown smiles at the comment. He's worked at the marijuana paraphernalia store for just over five years and the majority of customers he sees are between the ages of 40 to 60. Although Martin's private member's bill introduced in the House of Commons last week, which recommends fines instead of of criminal charges for anyone with two pot plants or less than 30 grams of marijuana, re-ignites the debate, it does little else, Brown said. "Overall it doesn't change the whole criminal thing," he said. "Really when it comes down to it it's still illegal." Until that changes, the government will have no control over gangs who use pot as currency, Brown said. Last month, nine people, eight of them Canadian, were arrested in B.C. and approximately $15 million worth of pot, cocaine and ecstasy was seized as a result of an international drug-smuggling ring probe. The probe was a part of a four-year investigation that's led to the seizure of B.C. marijuana going south of the border and cocaine coming north. The majority of gangs' marijuana trade crosses the border, but ultimately some of the drugs filter down to the street, Victoria Police department spokesperson Sgt. Grant Hamilton said. It's hard to say what effect the bill would have on such activity, he said. Ultimately police restraint from making a stand - either for or against - on such bills. If the bill would slash gangs' income is a good question, said Kelli Moorhouse, Camosun College's Criminal Justice department chair, and one she doesn't have the answer to. "It really depends on whether or not small time users are using organized gangs to get their marijuana," she said. In Canada, British Columbia already holds one of the lowest enforcement rates for small marijuana possession charges, Moorhouse said. Canada is shifting its view of marijuana over from the criminal system into the health system, as medicinal uses gain more awareness, she said. [side bars] The arm of the U.S. How our neighbours to the south view marijuana has a huge effect on how it's dealt with in Canada, Moorhouse said. "We look at some of our crime policies in the country, especially the more conservative crime policies, and I think there is a strong correlation between (them and) what American agenda is," she said. Brown views the U.S. as a major hurdle to the legalization of marijuana. "Until the U.S. changes its mind, there is squat all we can do here," he said. Bill could cause discrimination Handing out fines instead of pressing charges could hurt those already vulnerable, Brown said. Because of the abundant amount of paperwork involved in pressing charges, Victoria police pretty much leave people they see smoking pot to themselves, he noted. But that could change if police were able to hand out fines and the people who would be hit the hardest are the homeless, Brown said. While those with money could enjoy a joint in the comfort of their home, avoiding fines, those on the streets would be prime ticket cadets, he said. How do you test for marijuana? The biggest problem with decriminalizing minor possession of marijuana is were you draw the limit, Sgt. Hamilton said. Until alcohol, marijuana can not be tested for through a breathalyzer. A blood sample is need to test for pot and that in itself presents a charter challenge, he said. Therefore it would be impossible to check that people weren't driving high, Sgt. Hamilton said. Martin's say It's not the magic bullet, but it's a start, says Keith Martin. Although one of the main driving forces behind the bill is to destroy the underpinnings of organized crime, it would also opens up the debate for having a rational drug policy rather than the status quo, he said. The bill will save the police force time and the country money that could be redirected to programs that reduce the incidence of substance abuse, Martin said. "We are doing terrible harm if we continue to address substance abuse uniquely as a criminal issue from the federal level," he said. "The blinders have come off; we have to take a medical perspective if we are going to reduce harm and drug use in Canada." Martin proposed a similar private member's bill twice before, but both times they were voted down. In this bill Martin added the allowance of the possession of two plants. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin