Pubdate: 12 Mar 1999 Source: Halifax Daily News (Canada) Copyright: 1999 The Daily News. Contact: http://www.hfxnews.southam.ca/ Author: Stephen Kimber WEED OUT REAL CRIMINALS One in 50 otherwise good citizens has a criminal record Do you know that Statistics Canada reported this week more than 70 per cent of all drug charges filed in Canada in 1997 were marijuana-related? Do you know two-thirds of the 42,000 people charged with pot offences that year were, in fact, chewing up great gobs of expensive cop and court time, resources and budget for nothing more sinister than simply possessing a recreational drug most of the rest of us have at least tried - and many of us have even enjoyed from time to time - and that is clearly no more harmful or addictive (and probably less so) than alcohol? Do you know too, nearly 90 per cent of those who were charged for marijuana possession in 1997 were younger than 25.? Do you know they are part of the grand total of 600,000- roughly one in 50 - mostly otherwise upstanding, law-abiding Canadians of all ages, sizes, shapes, political views, sexual orientations, religions, ethnic groups, classes, and educations who carry around the burden of a criminal record for the simple reason they once got caught with a joint? Do you know the rate of so-called "drug crime" in Canada is increasing fastest in Nova Scotia, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba? Do you know that Alan Young, an Osgoode Law School professor who has studied the effects of prosecuting marijuana possession cases, estimates 60-70 per cent of the $1 billion spent in Canada on drug enforcement each year is actually spent on investigating, charging, convicting, and sometimes jailing, people for simply possessing marijuana? Half say it's OK Do you know in 1997 - the same year in which most of these other statistics were compiled - a CTV/Angus Reid poll reported 51 per cent of Canadians already believed smoking marijuana should not be a criminal offense? Do you know that represents an increase of a full 12 per cent over the past decade in the numbers of Canadians who want to see simple possession decriminalized? And the number of Canadians who think so is increasing each year... Do you know why our government doesn't change the law? Neither do I. - --- MAP posted-by: Mike Gogulski