Pubdate: Fri, 18 Dec 2009 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2009 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Ryan Hallett CAUGHT IN SAME NET Bill C-15 is a step backwards in its imposition of mandatory minimum prison sentences, including those for what in Canada have traditionally been considered victimless crimes, such as growing a small amount of marijuana at your residence. I understand when parliamentarians are focusing on organized crime for illegal activities which involve cultivating more than 200 plants on farms or residential property that are owned and run as multi-million-dollar grow-ops. However, despite the Senate's amendments, the bill still brings under its net a person who grows one plant on the window sill. It sentences youth not only to a nine-month jail term, but later labels as a convict someone who grows pot for recreational use in what has become a socially acceptable practice. The judge no longer would have the discretion to give a reduced sentence which would save someone who might be an otherwise law-abiding citizen from dragging around a criminal record that will make them less employable and a liability to our society. One does not have to approve of using drugs to see the folly in this type of legislation. Even the United States is apparently moving away from mandatory minimums. We can see how they have worked for them in their own war on drugs, with no reduction at all in the incidence of drug use and trafficking, and an ever-larger demographic of cons and ex-cons. Bill C-15 is regressive and sets us on a dangerous track towards a more repressive society. It drains resources at a time when we are tightening our belts, and creates a larger class of criminals who we have to pay to incarcerate, and who themselves continue to pay long after they complete their sentence. Ryan Hallett, Ottawa - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake