'Police aren't anti-marijuana': Weighill

VIANARCHRIS

Well-Known Member
Saskatoon’s police chief says the Liberal government needs to clarify Canada’s marijuana laws to combat serious misunderstandings about the legality of the drug.

“The police aren’t anti-marijuana,” Chief Clive Weighill said. “But we are in a situation right now that is a very grey zone.”

Weighill said despite Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s election promise that pot will be legalized for personal use, smoking, growing and selling weed in Canada is still against the law.

Weighill, who is also president of the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police, said the government needs to offer clarity to people — especially those who believe that because of the election promise, the drug is already legal.

“We’ve been asking the government to send a strong message out: the laws have not changed yet,” Weighill said.

Trudeau has tapped former Toronto police chief and now Liberal MP Bill Blair as the person who will lead consultations about the future of Canada’s pot laws.

Weighill said Blair has strongly indicated that Canada’s legal marijuana market will be heavily regulated and taxed.

“I think there is a big misunderstanding here that people think it’s going to be a free-for-all,” Weighill said.

He believes the pot industry will likely operate similar to the alcohol industry — producers and sellers will have to be licensed and there will be restrictions on who can buy the drug, he said.

Weighill isn’t the only who wants clarity. During a visit to Saskatoon on Tuesday, NDP leader Tom Mulcair told reporters he is not pleased with the government’s progress on the legalization of marijuana.

He said while the government waits on consultations, people are needlessly going to jail for simple possession of the drug.

“We’ve said nobody who is using marijuana for personal purposes should ever wind up being arrested or having a criminal record for that,” Mulcair said.

During the election, the NDP advocated decriminalization of marijuana.

Another piece of the regulatory puzzle for Weighill is the question of medical marijuana dispensaries. The owner of Saskatoon’s now-shuttered medical marijuana dispensary has asked city council if he can operate in a legal grey area.

Mark Hauk, founder of the Saskatoon Compassion Club, had argued that given impending legalization city council should set out the rules for medical dispensaries sooner rather than later. His request was rejected by city councillors earlier this week.

Hauk was charged last year with trafficking marijuana and possessing the proceeds of crime at his compassion club. Since the club closed, he says patients are suffering.

Weighill said until legalization happens, the laws about who can sell marijuana are clear — people who are unlicensed are not allowed to sell the drug even to patients who have marijuana prescriptions.

He said Saskatoon isn’t the only city to shut down medical pot dispensaries. Halifax, Toronto and Nanaimo have all recently raided similar storefront operations.

“There has to be equality before the law. We can’t let one open up and one not open up,” Weighill said.

The only Canadian city to allow medical dispensaries to operate with impunity is Vancouver, which Weighill said is an “anomaly” in Canada.

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VIANARCHRIS

Well-Known Member
Trudeau could end this last week with the stroke of a pen. But he won't. Because he's Harper 2.0.
End what? I'm assuming you're talking rec as you have no interest in medical.Ending 90 years of prohibition and international drug treaties requires a little more than the 'stroke of a pen'. Add in the complexities of making a once prohibited substance palatable with society as a whole, and it takes time. They gotta bring in all those fascist police state rules around sales and access to minors, ya know. They want to control us just like they do with booze and bombs, those bastards!
 

Brian Savage

Well-Known Member
Not to mention the legislative process.
Its not an empire, bills are passed through the house of commons in our democracy.
 

doingdishes

Well-Known Member
The Beard said he could decriminalize over night and look at legal.
i don't get why JT hasn't and isn't stopping busting people for personal use.
 

doingdishes

Well-Known Member
He starting to look like a another political liar.
yup...just another politician. you vote for hope (and Dizz I did not vote for JT) and get shafted. too bad there wasn't a process where you had a penalty if you didn't fulfill your campaign promises but i guess that would be not being elected...but Harper got in somehow....
 

doingdishes

Well-Known Member
Wrong country @dizzy! Canada's Prime Minister does not have Executive Privledges like the US President.
he could decrim right away..well Mulcair said it was possible to do overnight. they could start there. that would be a good start..and stop busting for personal! not even a ticket dammit!
 
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