Pubdate: Thu, 30 Jul 1999 Source: eye (Canada) Copyright: 1999 Eye Communications Ltd. Contact: 471 Adelaide St. W., Toronto, ON, M5V 1T1 Canada Fax: (416) 504-4348 Website: http://www.eye.net/ Forum: http://www.eye.net/eye/feedback/feedback.html Author: Nate Hendley NO-BUST MUSTS It's the dog days of summer, and all you want to do is sit under a tree, kick back and consume some illegal drugs. Besides the obvious health risks, there are a few things to bear in mind before undertaking such activity. For a start, warm weather doesn't grant immunity to arrest. "Currently, it's not socially acceptable to smoke marijuana in a park," says Robin Ellins, proprietor of the Friendly Stranger hemp store. "If you toke in a park, you'll get the bike cops after you." While Ellins is at pains to say he can't "coach" drug use, he does suggest that "consumption of cannabis should be done behind closed doors" -- even on the hottest of days. "Never carry more than what you need for the evening," adds Osgoode Hall law professor and drug law activist Alan Young. "If police stop you, and the quantity is small enough, the police will likely throw your pot in the sewer and let you go." They're less likely to do this if you're young, male, scruffy-looking and rude, he adds. "It's similar to traffic cops," Young says. "You can weasel out of a ticket if you convince the police you're polite and a moral person." In the words of plainclothes Detective-Constable Ken McGowan, who does undercover drug work when not patrolling the Entertainment District, "the person's attitude," as well as the quantity of pot, often makes the difference between a caution and an arrest. Technically, anyone who is actually arrested for pot possession faces a six-month jail sentence. Most first-time offenders in Toronto receive pre-trial diversion, however, meaning their charges are dropped in exchange for community service, says Young. Even if you like using drugs, avoid selling or smoking crack at all costs. Not only does it tend to destroy body and soul, it attracts undue attention from police. A few months ago, Detective Carl Noll of the police's Special Investigative Services, major drug branch, admitted as much to eye. Police "work on drugs that present the greatest threat to the community," said Det. Noll. "No one who knows drugs would argue that marijuana is more destructive than crack." A final word of advice: while it might be nice to get away from the sweltering city, Toronto is a far more pot-friendly place than, say, Tobermory. "As you move into the hinterlands, possession of a few joints is seen as a much more heinous crime," Young cheerfully explains. A recent study by the Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse pegged Toronto's marijuana arrest rate at 41 cases per 100,000 people, compared to 92 cases per 100,000 in the rest of Ontario. Important figures for the one in 10 Torontonians who smokes pot to bear in mind - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea