Pubdate: Mon, 26 Sep 2011
Source: New Zealand Herald (New Zealand)
Copyright: 2011 New Zealand Herald
Contact:  http://www.nzherald.co.nz/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/300
Author: Audrey Young

CHASING CANNABIS USERS A WASTE OF POLICE, SAYS BRASH

Act leader Don Brash wants the use of cannabis decriminalised, saying 
too much valuable police time is taken up enforcing a law that is 
flouted by about 400,000 people a year.

"I'm haunted by the thought that all that police time and all those 
police resources could be better deployed in actually keeping us safe 
from real criminals intent on harming us," he said in Pakuranga yesterday.

But instead, the law made criminals of 400,000 New Zealanders who 
were harming no one except arguably themselves "which is their 
prerogative in a free society".

Dr Brash is yet to convince his own party of the merits of the case, 
a party that prides itself on being tough on crime as well as 
libertarian. He said it was a personal view.

Dr Brash said he had not smoked marijuana and was not advocating its 
use. But his personal view is expected to raise some questions in Act.

Former Police Minister and Act Epsom candidate John Banks could not 
be reached for comment last night.

A spokeswoman for Prime Minister John Key said: "National has long 
held the view this would be a step in the wrong direction."

Police Minister Judith Collins also said Act's cannabis policy was 
going in the wrong direction.

Dr Brash raised the cannabis issue in a formal speech on law and 
order yesterday where he also set out a firm new policy enshrining 
the right to self-defence in the Bill of Rights Act.

That would make it more acceptable in law for a shopkeeper to belt an 
intruder with a hockey stick, or allow a farmer to shoot someone 
stealing his farm bike.

"Your home is your castle - your body is your temple," Dr Brash said. 
"The law must be unequivocal in allowing you to defend both with 
reasonable force."

The laws that police enforced should be keeping people safe from criminals.

"Laws that do not serve that purpose, and indeed possibly make us 
more vulnerable to criminals, should not be on the statute books to begin with.

"After long and painstaking reflection, I have come to have serious 
questions about our marijuana laws."

Since 1927, it had been a criminal offence to possess, use, produce 
or sell cannabis in New Zealand.

Dr Brash said the police and the courts spent about $100 million a 
year enforcing the prohibition of a drug believed by many people to 
be less dangerous than tobacco or alcohol.

"Is there really any point to this?"

About 6000 people were prosecuted every year for cannabis offences 
and 400,000 New Zealanders were estimated to use cannabis.

"In other words some 400,000 New Zealanders routinely flout the law - 
roughly 10 per cent of the total population - has the sky fallen in?"
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart