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Pubdate: Sun, 13 Jun 2004 Source: Toronto Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2004, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.canoe.com/NewsStand/TorontoSun/home.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/457 POT LAWS: ONLY TWO POSSIBLE CHOICES AS USUAL, the federal Liberals have it all wrong on marijuana. And Prime Minister Paul Martin's promise to revive their decriminalization bill should the Grits win re-election is just another dumb idea. There are only two logical approaches to this issue: Either enforce the marijuana laws we now have and put the organized criminals behind the big grow operations behind bars -- which is our view -- or legalize it, as advocated by economics professor Steve Easton in a report released by the Fraser Institute last week. But decriminalization is a no-man's land that will put the police in an even more impossible position than they are now. Either give police the resources and laws they need to deal with marijuana, or free them from fighting a losing battle. If society no longer believes the growing, consuming and trafficking in marijuana is a crime, then legalize it and tax it, which Easton estimates would pour $2 billion annually into government coffers from the $7-billion-a-year industry in B.C. alone. We take another view. Crack down on the organized criminals who are heavily involved in growing and trafficking and allow prosecutorial discretion for casual users, as is often the case now. But let's stop pretending the big grow-ops are harmless fun. This is big business with big profits. Remember the huge grow-op police discovered in the old Molson brewery near Barrie last year? Right now, marijuana laws aren't being enforced evenly across the country. Easton found that in B.C. only 13% of possession cases end in charges - -- compared to 60% elsewhere in Canada. In Vancouver, 55% of those convicted for running grow-ops did no jail time, while 13% were jailed for only one to 31 days. Imagine how much confusion there will be if the decriminalization bill is revived, which would make simple possession the equivalent of a parking fine and establish penalties ranging from fines to 14 years in prison (don't hold your breath) for grow-ops, depending on their size. The penalties for trafficking would remain the same, but clearly, if marijuana is decriminalized, then sentencing will become even more lax than it is now. Some police support decriminalization while others oppose it. We want effective laws that protect society, not politically correct half measures like decriminalization that only muddy the water. Either give our marijuana laws teeth or legalize pot, regulate it and tax it. And if it's the latter, come up with a realistic way to deal with drivers who are impaired by marijuana and address the furious reaction we'll get from the U.S. Finally, figure out a sane way to supply pot to people entitled to use it for medical purposes, a relatively small job the feds have already botched. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake