Pubdate: Fri, 26 Oct 2007 Source: Sudbury Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2007 The Sudbury Star Contact: http://www.thesudburystar.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/608 Author: John Rimore, Executive Director John Howard Society of Sudbury TOUGHER PENALTIES WON'T AFFECT CRIME RATES The present situation of using crime to further political agendas under the guise of protecting citizens of Canada has reached new levels of insanity with the present direction of our federal government. The new crime omnibus bill, the federal anti-drug strategy and the recommendations of the panel assessing Correctional Services Canada fail Canadians miserably. They fail all of us because the government has frozen out all of their own experts that recommend completely different strategies to reduce crime and substance abuse and positively rehabilitate offenders. First, the crime omnibus bill is a repetition of already existing legislation with more harsh and retributive sentences attached. Unfortunately, we have been misled by our elected officials. All of the research and studies that the elected officials themselves commissioned - and taxpayers funded through federal government approval - have shown that mandatory minimum sentences actually increase prison populations and do nothing to prevent crime. Sentence severity does not deter crime; the likelihood of being caught causes people to pause before committing a crime. It is naive to think harsh sentences will deter crime; we have more than 100 years of North American practice to prove that. Second, the anti-drug strategy that calls for a war on drugs is more about filling prisons and punishing already marginalized people than it is about reducing demand or abuse-related harm. We must remember that a war on drugs is a war on families as many Canadian families are affected by the perils of substance abuse. There is, once again, complete disregard for the work and research of thousands of researchers, including the World Health Organization and the Canadian Medical Association. There has been no mention of harm-reduction strategies, except to denigrate them, even though we know that harm reduction strategies work. Imagine how much more we can accomplish if we could divert the hundreds of millions of dollars per year that are wasted on interdiction, prosecution, criminalization and incarceration of addicts into serious and sustainable treatment options for addicts and substance abusers. The reality is that most violent crime and murders associated with drugs are not over the drugs themselves but over drug profits. Mandatory sentences will not stop that. Keeping people in prison for longer time periods through mandatory minimum sentences and the recommendation to end statutory release will achieve longer prison sentences, but not a reduction in crime. The deception being promulgated to the Canadian people that crime will be reduced is irresponsible. Manipulating Canadians through fear of crime is regressive and unworthy and it does not make any of us safer. We have been taught that if something doesn't work we should try and try again. Albert Einstein said that if you've tried again and again and it still doesn't work then try something else, because your original premise is faulty. Indeed that is the problem with our federal government's approach to crime and substance abuse, their premise is faulty and they refuse to admit it. It is time to clean our streets, stop drug addiction and reduce violent crime. Putting people in prison for longer periods of time will not achieve that, it will only make the problem worse. John Rimore Executive Director John Howard Society of Sudbury - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin