Pubdate: Fri, 11 Feb 2011 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2011 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Mike De Souza, Postmedia News OPPOSITION BLOCKING CRIME-FIGHTING LEGISLATION: NICHOLSON Police Association Supports Tory Bill Conservatives, Liberals and New Democrats took turns accusing each other of being soft on crime as the Harper government urged opposition parties to support its latest attempt to toughen sentences for drug-related activity. One day after the Liberals announced they would no longer support the legislation, Bill S-10, adopted in the Senate, Justice Minister Rob Nicholson staged a news conference with other Tory MPs and the president of the Canadian Police Association, accusing the opposition of blocking measures that would target drug traffickers and organized crime. "The bill that we have presented to Parliament is very specific," Nicholson said. "It sends out the correct message that if you're getting into the grow-op business for the purposes of trafficking -- again, that distinction is sometimes lost on some my opponents to this bill -- if you're into the business of trafficking, if you're bringing drugs into this country, it's very specific as well. If you sell drugs around a school, you're not going to like this bill." Charles Momy, president of the association which represents 43,000 police members across the country, said the legislation would prevent instances when criminals re-offend very quickly after getting out of a short jail sentence. "In simple terms, keep these criminals in jail longer and you take away their opportunity to traffic drugs," Momy said. "It's that simple." The Liberals had supported previous versions of the legislation that was actually killed by the Harper government when it shut down Parliament in December 2009. But Liberal public safety critic Mark Holland suggested the current bill, if passed into law, could cost billions in new investments for expanded prison space, without actually discouraging organized crime or rehabilitating criminals. Instead, he said it could cause an increase in criminal activity for offences such as someone with a few marijuana plants or Tylenol 3. "The problem is when you put in people for six months, they get worse, not better," said Holland. "You take a kid who had a minor problem, you send him to prison and you create a major criminal." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake