Pubdate: Thu, 10 Dec 2015 Source: Herald, The (Glasgow, UK) Copyright: 2015 Herald & Times Group Contact: http://www.heraldscotland.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4784 Author: David Leask ON-THE-SPOT WARNINGS FOR CARRYING CANNABIS TO FREE UP POLICE TIME Change in Approach to Petty Offending to Ensure Major Crimes Are the Priority PEOPLE caught with small quantities of cannabis will face on-the-spot warnings from police rather than prosecution. The change in enforcing drug laws is part of a major overhaul of how officers handle petty offending to free up the time of police and prosecutors. Scottish officers will next month start issuing new "Recorded Police Warnings" to many of the tens of thousands of people a year found committing minor offences, such as carrying cannabis, urinating in the street or petty shoplifting. Senior police sources stress they are looking for a "proportionate" and "effective" disposal to the kind of offences that until now would either result in a fixed-penalty notice or a report to the Crown Office that ended in no proceedings or a fiscal warning. The change in tactic means that, for the first time, casual users of cannabis can expect to avoid the stress of a formal report to procurators fiscal. In recent years, this has rarely resulted in more than a written rebuke. One source said: "We think a warning on the spot from an officer using his or her discretion is much more effective than a letter in the post months later saying nothing will be done. "This means that officers will not have to spend their time writing standard prosecution reports and can do police work instead." The shift in approach is seen as an important boost for progressive drugs policies north of the Border and brings it into line with England and Wales. The new recorded police warnings scheme, to be introduced on January 11, replaces a series of adult police warnings used in different ways across the the old eight legacy police forces. It is understood that only a "low thousand" number of adult warnings were issued every year in Scotland. None of them were for drugs offences. The new recorded warnings will never be used for violent or sexual crimes. Essentially, sources say, they are for the roughly 45 per cent of offences that, when reported to the Crown Office, do not result in a full prosecution through the courts. The Crown bases its decisions on whether to prosecute on so-called "Lord Advocate's Guidelines" that are not in the public domain. The Recorded Police Warnings will also rely on such secret guidelines. It means insiders are unable to say exactly how much of cannabis would constitute "a small quantity". In other jurisdictions, such as the Netherlands, there are clear and published rules on how much cannabis can be carried for personal use without risk of prosecution. Law enforcement sources, however, stress that Scottish officers will be expected to use their discretion over how to treat somebody caught with, for example, a joint. A user having a joint in a car or in the presence of children, for example, would be treated quite differently from somebody who posed no risk to others. There were 31,632 recorded offences of "possession" of all kinds of illegal drugs, including cannabis, in Scotland in 2014/15 and more than 3,000 of "possession with intent to supply". Crown sources stressed that the recorded police warnings would only apply to a small proportion of possession offences and none for supply. One drugs expert, briefed about the move by police, said the new approach was "commonsensical" and an important step towards proportionate enforcement of UK-wide "war on drugs" laws that are beyond the control of Holyrood. Speaking generally about the scheme, Chief Superintendent Brian McInulty, of Police Scotland's criminal justice division, said the new warnings would "provide a consistent, swifter, more effective and efficient way of dealing with low level offences earlier in the process than the current processes allow for". A spokesman for the Crown Office said the new system enabled procurators fiscal and courts "to focus on more serious crimes while giving police the range of powers they need to respond quickly and appropriately to very minor offences". - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom