Pubdate: Sat, 18 Jan 2014 Source: StarPhoenix, The (CN SN) Copyright: 2014 The StarPhoenix Contact: http://www.canada.com/saskatoonstarphoenix/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/saskatoonstarphoenix/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/400 Author: Charles Hamilton CITY POLICE LAY MOST POT CHARGES Far Above National Average Pot activists say new data shows Saskatoon police have a chronic urge to charge people for lighting up. "Saskatoon is known as being one of the prohibitionist places in Canada," said Dana Larsen, the director of Sensible B.C., which is campaigning to decriminalize cannabis in that province. Saskatoon police are more likely to charge someone caught with small amounts of marijuana than authorities in any other big city. Incident reports obtained from Statistics Canada for 2012 show that police in Saskatoon laid marijuana possession charges in more than 82 per cent of incidents involving possession of less than 30 grams. That number contrasts drastically with more lax jurisdictions such as Halifax, where simple cannabis possession resulted in a charge only 18 per cent of the time. In Vancouver, a city seen as having liberal drug policies, police laid possession charges 20 per cent of the time. The national average is 47 per cent, according to data from Statistics Canada. The patchwork of possession charge rates across the country comes at a time when the marijuana debate is again heating up. Simple possession has been legalized or decriminalized in multiple states south of the border. Colorado, for example, recently legalized recreational marijuana use. But it's not just Americans looking to loosen up on people lighting up. While marijuana arrest rates have increased under the Harper government, earlier this year the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police proposed a ticketing system for pot, saying criminal charges place a significant burden on police and court resources. Saskatoon's police chief, Clive Weighill, could not be reached for comment, but in an earlier interview he expressed support for the association's preference for handing out tickets instead of charging people. Weighill stressed the police chiefs aren't seeking decriminalization or legalization of marijuana - they simply want to give patrol officers more discretion. Officers only have a choice between turning a blind eye and laying a charge, he said at the time. Still, Saskatoon has long been seen as a highly restrictive jurisdiction compared to other Canadian cities when it comes to pot use. In 2004, well-known pot activist Marc Emery spent three months in the Saskatoon Correctional Centre after pleading guilty to passing a joint at a pot rally in Kiwanis Park. Ken Sailor, a long time marijuana activist in Saskatoon who favours legalization, says the police position on marijuana in the city hasn't stopped people from smoking up. Instead, the strict enforcement drives the market underground, he said. "Maybe the reason we have such high rates of gang violence is because of prohibition. If we legalize it, maybe we will take the money out of the hands of the gangs." Saskatoon leads the country in gang-related homicides per capita and is regularly near the top of the crime severity index. Meanwhile, Regina - another Saskatchewan city that often tops the list of per capita crime rates - only charges people with possession 47 per cent of the time, which is near the national average. No one from the Saskatoon police was available for comment Friday, but Insp. Jerome Engele told a national newspaper that police enforcement in the city is ensuring marijuana possession and distribution "doesn't turn into a bigger problem. "If you don't address a problem, and you say, 'It's OK not to clean your room,' the room becomes a mess later on," he said. Cities closer to Saskatoon's percentage include Winnipeg (79 per cent), St. John's, Nfld. (71 per cent) and Edmonton (70 per cent). - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D