Pubdate: Tue, 15 May 2012
Source: Canadian Medical Association Journal (Canada)
Copyright: 2012 Canadian Medical Association
Contact:  http://www.cmaj.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/754
Author: Paul Christopher Webster

FORMER SUPREME COURT JUSTICE BLASTS MINIMUM SENTENCES FOR MARIJUANA OFFENDERS

Canada's new mandatory minimum sentences for drug offenders are based 
on "very bad criminal law policy" and constitute a threat to public 
health as well as the concept of judicial proportionality, former 
Supreme Court of Canada Justice Louise Arbour says.

The law should, and almost certainly will, face a justifiable 
constitutional challenge, Arbour adds of the omnibus crime 
legislation, Bill C-10, which received royal assent in March 
(www.parl.gc.ca/HousePublications/Publication.aspx?DocidT65759&file=4).

Forcing judges to impose minimum sentences for drug offences 
endangers the legal precept of proportionality, under which judges 
must tailor the level of punishment to the severity of the crime, 
adds the former United Nations high commissioner for human rights and 
former chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunals for 
Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia.

"Each case is very contextual," argues Arbour, who served on the 
Supreme Court from 1999-2004 and is currently president and CEO of 
the International Crisis Group, a nonprofit organization which 
advises governments on means of avoiding armed conflicts. "Some 
people commit crimes under tremendous pressure. ... A smart 
sentencing policy leaves it to judges to decide."

Arbour also warns that the stiffened laws - particularly for 
relatively petty cannabis offences - may backfire by generating 
disrespect for drug control measures and promoting noncompliance. 
"When the laws are too harsh it's like a river hits the wall," she says.

When it comes to cannabis, Canadian legislation has long suffered 
from a "disconnect" with social realities, as polls show the vast 
majority of Canadians support decriminalization of marijuana, while 
legislators seem bent on introducing laws to prohibit its use, says 
Arbour, who in 2003 wrote a dissenting Supreme Court opinion that 
argued imprisonment for marijuana use is not justified on the grounds 
that it constitutes a risk to public health, as the harm caused is 
only to the user, not others 
(http://scc.lexum.org/en/2003/2003scc74/2003scc74.html).

"For the vast majority of recreational consumers the harm is 
minimal," Arbour insists.

Arbour's biting critique is part of a growing chorus of opposition to 
Bill C-10, which compels judges to impose sentences of at least one 
year in drug cases involving violence, repeat offenders or crime 
groups, and at least two years in drug cases involving persons under 
the age of 18. A minimum six-month sentence must be issued to those 
who grow five or more cannabis plants.

Among others who have assailed the legislation are three provincial 
officers of health, including British Columbia's Dr. Perry Kendall, 
who contended it is a "complete departure from evidence-based 
policy-making" that would clog jails and expose nonviolent drug 
offenders to health risks (www.openmedicine.ca/article/view/501/453).

Other critics have included former federal health minister Ujjal 
Dossanjh and three other former BC attorneys-general, who urged the 
federal government to "abandon mandatory minimum sentences for minor 
and non-violent marijuana-related offences and instead pursue a 
taxation and regulation strategy to better protect community health 
and safety while at the same time undermining gang profits" 
(http://stoptheviolencebc.org/2012/02/07/former-attorneys-general-endorse-stop-the-violence-bc/).

Under the aegis of the Global Commission on Drug Policy, Arbour and a 
blue-ribbon group of former world leaders and executives called on 
Prime Minister Stephen Harper to "adopt an evidence-based approach to 
controlling cannabis" and to "pursue a public health approach aimed 
also at undermining the root causes of organized crime" 
(http://stoptheviolencebc.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/Stop-the-Violence-BC-Global-Commission-on-Drug-Policy-letter-Bill-C-10-Letter.pdf).

They also urged that marijuana be taxed and regulated under "a public 
health framework. ... This approach also has the potential to 
actually reduce rates of cannabis use while also generating 
significant tax revenue."

The Global Commission on Drug Policy has argued that "fundamental 
reforms in national and global drug control policies are urgently 
needed" as the global war on drugs has failed to curtail supply or 
consumption. "Repressive efforts directed at consumers impede public 
health measures to reduce HIV/AIDS, overdose fatalities and other 
harmful consequences of drug use. Government expenditures on futile 
supply reduction strategies and incarceration displace more 
cost-effective and evidence-based investments in demand and harm 
reduction," the commission stated in a report, War on Drugs 
(www.globalcommissionondrugs.org/wp-content/themes/gcdp_v1/pdf/Global_Commission_Report_English.pdf).

Stop the Violence BC, a coalition of law enforcement officials, 
public health scientists and drug policy advocates, also urges reform 
of cannabis policies in order to reduce gang-related violence and 
other social harms. "Eighty percent of the revenue for organized 
crime in BC comes from marijuana," says coalition member Evan Wood, 
director of the Urban Health Research Initiative at the BC Centre for 
Excellence in HIV/AIDS.

Citing estimates from the Health Officers Council of BC, Wood also 
notes that 36 times more money is spent in Canada on drug law 
enforcement than on prevention and research, raising the question of 
whether a more "fiscally responsible" public health approach to drugs 
might be wiser 
(http://drugpolicy.ca/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/Regulated-models-Final-Nov-2011-1.pdf).
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom