Pubdate: Mon, 06 Nov 2017 Source: Toronto Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2017 Canoe Limited Partnership Contact: http://www.torontosun.com/letter-to-editor Website: http://torontosun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/457 Author: Edward Prutschi Page: 5 CRUSHING HIGH HOPES Years ago, when Justin Trudeau stepped onto a platform in a Vancouver park and proclaimed through a cloud of sweet-smelling haze that a federal Liberal government would legalize marijuana, there was much excitement within the cannabis community. With last week's announcement by Trudeau's provincial Liberal cousins, the realities of draconian regulation in Ontario have resulted in the crushing disappointment of those long-forgotten high hopes. For recreational users, smoking will only be permitted in private residences. Puffing at work, on university campuses, on patios, sidewalks or parks, will all remain prohibited. Of much greater concern is the introduction of sweeping new - and likely unconstitutional - powers being granted to police to ensure no one is smoking up in a vehicle. Any police officer with "reasonable grounds" to believe cannabis is present in a vehicle may, without a warrant, search that vehicle and any person found inside of it. This power extends well beyond what might be necessary to ensure that the person behind the wheel isn't driving while stoned and will also grant free reign to water-side searches of cottage country pleasure boaters. Medicinal users have it only marginally better and still face restrictions on self-medicating in any enclosed public spaces. This places Toronto in the bizarre situation of condoning the use of heroin by opioid addicts at local safe injection sites while an arthritis sufferer will be fined for dosing at a Leafs' game. Smokers under Ontario's legal age of 19 will face fines of $200 implemented as a non-criminal provincial offence. This will leave many young people with the mistaken impression that underage marijuana use will net them nothing more than a slap on the wrist. The interaction of a provincial ticket for illegal drug use and the zero tolerance policies of U.S. immigration to narcotics violations, have the potential to create a dangerous hidden consequence for teenaged tokers. While few will lose sleep over the $200 fine, being caught with pot could mean no spring break to Daytona Beach when college rolls around and, worse yet, a shocking discovery that you can't accept that six-figure Silicone Valley job you worked so hard to earn. The risk of such serious unintended consequences could result in thousands of teenagers clogging our already glacial traffic courts with marijuana tickets exacerbating the existing intolerable trial delays inherent in that system. But the real fun won't come in nickel-and-diming underage users and public space smokers. That's reserved for individuals and corporations who have the audacity to take on Ontario's new government cannabis monopoly. Illegal dispensaries, their employees, and even the landlords who lease them space, face fines of up to $250,000 and two years in jail for individuals. Corporate fines ring in at up to $500,000 per day. With such astronomical penalties, perhaps the province is actually hoping for serial violators to clear up our pesky record-setting debt. Criminal defence lawyers such as myself are experiencing a natural high secure in the anticipation of the impending litigation flood, but Ontario's marijuana users could be forgiven for seeing their leafy-eyed dreams go up in smoke. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt