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UK: Major study into how cannabis use is policed

John Land

24dash

Tuesday 23 Jan 2007

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A major new study has shown major inconsistencies in the way cannabis
use is being policed in different parts of the UK.

Despite police guidance to issue street warnings for most cannabis
possession offences since its downgrading from Class B to C in 2004,
researchers found the proportion of street warnings in four police areas
varied from 22% to 42%.

The decision to arrest or issue a street warning depended on factors
such as the views of the officer, the amount of cannabis found, the
attitude of the offender and local policy.

The report, compiled by the Institute for Criminal Policy Research for
the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, looked at the impact of reclassification
in 2004 on cannabis policing.

It focused on the new practice of issuing street warnings for
possession, instead of making arrests. It also captured views of the
police and young people about the changes.

Despite having a legal duty to arrest 16- and 17-year-olds, almost half
of interviewed officers wanted to police them in the same way as adults.

One police officer interviewed for the study said: “It just seems a bit
unfair for a 16-year-old to get nicked for it and an 18-year-old in the
same group to get a slap on the wrist and that’s it.”

In some police force areas, the issuing of street warnings appeared to
be driven by pressure from senior officers to meet targets for the
number of “offences brought to justice”.

People from black and minority ethnic groups in the four sites in the
study were over-represented in the arrest and street warning statistics
for cannabis possession.

Report author Mike Hough said: “When cannabis was reclassified as a
Class C drug, guidelines were issued advising officers to give street
warnings for most possession offences, arresting only in aggravating
circumstances.

"We found that street warnings were issued for under half of possession
offences. Over half of officers were against the downgrading and many
said that cannabis arrests often led to the detection of more serious
crimes. In fact, we found that this occurred in less than one per cent
of cases.”

Officers in busy urban sites had a better understanding of cannabis
policing than those working in the quieter areas who dealt with such
offences less frequently.

Nearly all the officers said that they had dealt with a member of the
public who believed – or claimed to believe – that cannabis had been
legalised.

Rough estimates for the first year of street warnings suggest that
cannabis reclassification had saved over £3.5 million of police money
and over 250,000 officer hours across the 43 forces of England and Wales.

The researchers concluded that policy on policing cannabis should follow
three principles:

* Effective monitoring of the policing of cannabis offences, with some
form of independent scrutiny.
* Close scrutiny of the impact of cannabis policing on black and ethnic
minority groups, to ensure even-handed treatment.
* Keeping a close watch on the way in which performance management
targets affect the policing of cannabis.

http://www.24dash.com/communities/15594.htm

 

 

 

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