Pubdate: Fri, 13 March 1998 Source: Belfast Telegraph Contact: JUDGES WAGE DRUGS WAR Longer Jail Terms Are Suggested DRUG dealers in Northern Ireland should be locked up for longer than in the rest of the United Kingdom, the province's top judges have declared. They described the present maximum of 14 years as "unrealistic" and said new laws were necessary to curb the increasing drug trade in the province. Laying down new sentencing guidelines in the Court of Appeal, the judges said: "We would express the hope that the Government in this jurisdiction will review the limit as a positive effort to prevent Northern Ireland becoming more deeply involved in the evil drug trade." The court dismissed an appeal against a four-year jail sentence by David McIlwaine (25), of Salia Avenue, Carrickfergus, who had pleaded guilty to possessing almost 10kg of cannabis resin with a street value of £100,000. Delivering the court's reserved judgment, Lord Justice MacDermott said: "This 10kg seizure indicates there is a growing amount of cannabis resin in circulation in this jurisdiction and that the use of cannabis is on the increase. "That is a most regrettable situation and the courts must adjust their levels of sentencing upwards in an attempt to deter such activity." He quoted RUC statistics showing that seizures of cannabis rose from 97kg in 1994 to 455kg last year. Lord Justice MacDermott said: "While 10kg may be a common seizure in England, it can in Northern Ireland represent the first flowering of a developing drugs market which requires a forceful judicial response." He said the law had not been changed since 1971 and a well-known guideline case for sentencing was no longer appropriate. The judge said the practice in England was to impose a 10-year sentence for possession of 500kg of cannabis but the court felt that in Northern Ireland, the possession of 200kg should merit such a sentence. "We take this view because we are satisfied that it is essential that we try to curb the increasing traffic in this drug in this jurisdiction," he said. The three appeal judges said that while sentences could not be calculated simply by weight or value, they felt possession of cannabis as low as 1kg should result in at least five years imprisonment, rising to about 10 years for 200kg. "Larger quantities would attract sentences up to the maximum which could well be appropriate in many cases," they said.