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UK: Outcry as police let cannabis offenders off with a warning

Michael Blackley

Edinburgh Evening News

Saturday 02 Sep 2006

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POLICE in the Lothians are among the first in Scotland to ditch
prosecutions for possessing cannabis in favour of handing out warnings.

A pilot project has reportedly already seen 23 warnings issued to people
over the age of 16 caught with the drug in West Lothian.
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The cautions are handed out if individuals are caught with less than £15
worth of cannabis. If they are caught again, they face court.

The scheme has been launched despite reassurances from police chiefs
that their stance would not change when the drug was downgraded to a
class C substance in 2004. The move has angered anti-drugs campaigners,
who are concerned that it will send out the wrong message to youngsters
and add to the existing confusion over the legal status of the drug.

A spokesman for Lothian and Borders Police was reported to have said
today: "West Lothian is the only division where they use adult warnings.
There is a pilot project agreed with procurators fiscal."

The move is also being piloted in Fife, where officers have issued 40
warnings for possession, with only two of the individuals being caught
reoffending.

The scheme follows on from a decision by all of Scotland's police forces
to introduce adult warnings for minor first-time offences such as
urinating in public or low-level breaches of the peace, in a bid to
lighten the load on courts and prosecutors.

But campaigners never expected drug offences to be included. Alistair
Ramsay, of the educational consultancy Drugwise, said: "If this sends
out the wrong message, compounded by the poor information about the
reclassification, leading to young people believing that cannabis' legal
status has changed, then it is entirely wrong."

And Professor Neil McKeganey, from Glasgow University's centre for drug
misuse research, said: "Most members of the public are unclear as to the
legal situation in relation to cannabis and that is why this is all the
more dangerous."

The apparent change in policy comes as new figures show a huge increase
in the number of people detained in Lothian hospitals with mental and
behavioural problems attributed to cannabis.

Statistics from the Scottish Executive earlier this year showed that
cannabis-related casualties more than trebled, from 45 in 2002-03 to 136
in 2004-05.

The figures followed claims by anti-drugs groups that reclassification
would lead to increased usage of the drug. It was also claimed that
cannabis could lead to lung damage, depression, anxiety and even
psychotic episodes in people with schizophrenia

A spokesman for the Association of Chief Police Officers in Scotland was
quoted as saying: "The police service in Scotland continues to take a
robust stance on anybody caught in possession of drugs. The projects in
place in Fife and Lothian and Borders are in agreement with local
procurators fiscal and in the spirit of the criminal justice reform
process."








 

 

 

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