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UK: The Law: is it always right?

Alun Buffry

CCNEWZ

Saturday 01 Oct 2005

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It’s often easy for people to see that repressive laws in other
countries are in some way wrong. Maybe they contravene Rights, are bias
or give preferential treatment one section of the community, or just
don’t make sense they are not in the public interest.

But what about here in the UK? Are of Governments, whatever the party,
somehow divinely inspired and never make mistakes? Or do we have bad
laws to? And if we do have bad laws, how do we get them changed or
repealed?

What happens when our Government refuses to listen to protests,
petitions, letters? What can we do to change the law? In short, next to
nothing! We can elect a different Government (or try to) and hope for
the best.

That’s all folks! But is that the end? Does that leave us at the mercy
of the politicians and the lawyers? Not quite: read on.

The POWER of the JURY

A few years ago, (1998), I wrote to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II,
asking whether the jury had the right to judge the justice of the law
itself, after reading of such powers in the US.

The reply from the Court Service stated that although the jury cannot
judge the law itself, it is up to them “to apply the law as they see
fit”. So it is quite clear, that as member of a jury, whatever the judge
or anyone else says, it is your duty and responsibility not simply
whether to ascertain guilt or innocence through the evidence presented
in the trial, but also to consider whether or not the law has been
correctly applied.

If you think the defendant should not even have been taken to court,
despite the evidence, then you can say NOT GUILTY!

MIS-APPLICATION OF THE LAW

So what sort of case are we talking about here?

One obvious case would be seen if you watched the trial of a man for
breaking into a house when clearly his purpose and intention was to
rescue people from a fire. Or if he broke into a car to save a life. The
evidence of forced entry a criminal offence would be clear enough; the
man may even have admitted everything. But should he be punished?

Another case would be if a police officer, forensic scientist, were
prosecuted for possession of an illegal drug when clearly it was in the
course of his duty. Or in fact, a teacher, parent or doorman who had
confiscated the drug with the intention of handing it in. In both cases
it would be unjust to find them guilty and punish them, if not simply
silly.

Fortunately such prosecutions are rare but what about individual cases?
How should we decide whether the law has been correctly applied? One
thing is for sure neither judge, prosecution nor defence lawyers are
likely to be of much help in the courtroom; after all, they earn their
money by appearing there.

A CRIME WITHOUT A VICTIM

You may have heard of holiday makers taking their medication abroad
where it is illegal, and getting prosecuted? Is that RIGHT? Is that
JUST? Even though the laws of that country are quite explicit and those
laws were broken (ignorance is no excuse).

What about a person in this country who is using a banned (illegal)
substance to relieve intense pain, having found no alternative? That is:
out of dire necessity?

In the case of cannabis, a plant grown and used medically in the UK and
around the globe for hundreds and thousands of years a plant known to
relieve suffering from many ailments yet it has never killed any and has
no fatal overdose?

What would you do, faced with intense pain? Break the law or suffer
agony and humiliation?

The Government flies in the face of literally MILLIONS of people who
testify to the medical properties of cannabis, also known as hemp and
marijuana, by denying that it has any medical value at all, despite
licensing research into extracts. Furthermore, the High Court in London
has ruled that the defence of medical “necessity” whereby people could
hope to escape conviction is not valid.

SO ITS’ UP TO YOU

How can you, the JUROR, decide whether or not the law is being correctly
applied in the case of possession, cultivation, or even supply, if it
was for medical reasons?

Maybe a good starting point is to ask whether anyone has been helped, or
hurt. Has there been any malice or threats, has there been any victims,
has there been any property ruined or Rights infringed, has society been
upset, has the safety and security of the country been put at risk?

It would be very hard to say yes to any of those questions in most
cannabis cases, so why are the cases happening? Surely the law is meant
to protect the people, their houses and possessions, their rights, and
the security and safety of the environment and the society we live in.

If the law is not doing that, why the court case?

As a member of a JURY (most of us will be at some time during our lives)
you alone have the POWER to see JUSTICE.

If you think the law has been MIS-APPLIED (and I am thinking
specifically of medical cannabis possession and supply here when it
prevents agony), it is UP TO YOU. You can return the JUST verdict NOT
GUILTY.

Nobody is allowed to pressurise you into doing otherwise. THAT is
certainly one way to halt the senseless prosecutions that cost sometimes
hundreds of thousands of pounds, do many-fold times more harm than good.

NO VICTIM NO CRIME = NOT GUILTY
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