Pubdate: Tue, 16 Jun 2009 Source: Langley Advance (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc. Contact: http://www.langleyadvance.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1248 Author: Travis Erbacher 'TOUGH' LAW JUST ELECTION GRAB Dear Editor, Prior to the last election, Stephen Harper introduced legislation which would give a six-month mandatory minimum sentence to anyone caught growing even as little as one marijuana plant. The opposition to mandatory minimum sentences from prosecutors, defence attorneys, judges, criminologists, and virtually everybody who has a working set of eyes from which to view the evidence is staggering. The legislation died when the last election was called, but the Harper government felt marijuana is such a problem that they must reintroduce the bill, which has just recently passed successfully. Mandatory minimums do not work as a deterrent, but more importantly, they take away judicial discretion. Bill C-15 would apply the same sentence to the medical user who cannot successfully get a "medpot" licence and the large-scale grower for an organized criminal organization. Both would get a mandatory minimum sentence of six months in jail. This takes small-scale growers out of the market, increasing and protecting the monopoly that gangs have in the drug trade. By introducing these "tough" sentences, we will see drug prices rise, gang profits rise, turf wars increase, and more innocent bystanders get shot, and the frightened public will call for more prisons, more police, and more power for the government and law enforcement. The Conservatives introduced the bill to appear "tough on crime." The Liberals voted in lock step, because they do not want to go in to an election looking "soft on crime." When you go to the polls, remember that the Liberals exhibited the same type of "facts optional" approach to policy as the Harper Conservatives. Travis Erbacher, Langley - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake