HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html Home Pot Growers Face Longer Sentences
Pubdate: Sat, 19 Oct 2002
Source: Toronto Star (CN ON)
Copyright: 2002 The Toronto Star
Contact:  http://www.thestar.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456
Note: by Torstar News Service
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada)

HOME POT GROWERS FACE LONGER SENTENCES

KITCHENER - People convicted of operating large-scale marijuana grows in 
residential areas have a greater chance of going to jail following a 
landmark decision this week by the Ontario Court of Appeal, a Kitchener 
drug prosecutor says.

"The appeal basically, as far as the Crown is concerned, confirms that 
conditional sentences are most often not appropriate" for pot growers who 
endanger the lives of neighbours and others in the community, said David 
Rowcliffe, a federal drug prosecutor, who heads a Kitchener-based satellite 
office of the federal Department of Justice.

"The Crown will be using the Court of Appeal decision as a precedent for 
all future sentencing," Rowcliffe said.

Even Hal Mattson, a Kitchener lawyer who represents many of the people 
charged locally with these indoor grows, said the decision will decrease 
the possibility of future conditional sentences, the most common sentence 
given in local cases.

Rowcliffe called the decision a "test case," as it should give the lower 
courts guidance on sentencing. Locally, the sentences have ranged from 
suspended sentences to 15 months in jail for this crime. More than 100 
cases are slowly moving through the court system.

The case that caused the three appellant judges to turn their eye, for the 
first time, to this crime involved a two-year sentence a Stoney Creek man 
received last June for turning his family home into a large-scale grow 
operation.

In sentencing Khuong Van Nguyen last June, Justice Bernd Zabel of Hamilton 
said courts across Canada have tended to treat residential grow operations 
leniently, but it was now time to make the "risk-reward ratio" less 
favourable for these people.

"They have invaded our community with apparent impunity," Zabel said in June.

"They have boldly entered residential areas where our citizens have saved 
to purchase dream homes for themselves and their families only to be 
confronted with large scale, high risk criminal activity on their street 
and even next door," the judge said.

Nguyen's defence lawyer appealed the sentence saying it was too harsh, and 
Rowcliffe, who was the Crown who argued the case before the Ontario Court 
of Appeal, said he argued that the sentence was appropriate considering the 
negative impact of such operations on communities.

The appellant court agreed that jail was appropriate, but said two years 
less a day was too long. Instead, they imposed a sentence of time already 
served, which Rowcliffe said amounted to about 14 months.

"We agree that the trial judge was entitled to decline to impose a 
conditional sentence in light of the evidence of increasing prevalence of 
this form of offence in the local communities," and the danger caused by 
bypassing hydro lines to steal the large amounts of electricity needed to 
grow the plants, the three higher court judges ruled.

"However, in our view, the trial judge failed to give sufficient weight to 
the fact that the appellant (Nguyen) was a first offender; and that he (the 
trial judge) overemphasized the evidence of increasing prevalence when he 
imposed a sentence that is beyond the range for similar offences in 
Ontario," the judges said in their hand-written decision.
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