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UK: Cannabis report tells of Class C benefits

Press and Journal

Wednesday 13 Mar 2002

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DAVID Blunkett's plans to downgrade cannabis to the same category as
tranquillisers such as Valium could save police at least £38 million a
year and vastly improve officers' relations with the public, an
independent report said today.

The study by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation revealed huge variations
across the country in the way offenders are dealt with for possession of
cannabis.

Describing the chaotic way police currently deal with the drug, the
authors said some officers "specialise" in arresting marijuana users,
while others have "effectively decriminalised cannabis in their everyday
working practices'.

The report - entitled Times They Are A-Changing - concluded: "The
chances of being arrested depend on the force areas where an offence is
discovered and on the experience and attitudes of individual officers."

Co-author Professor Mike Hough said the Lambeth experiment - in which
Metropolitan Police officers have dealt with cannabis users by
confiscating the drug and giving an informal warning - should be
extended across Britain.

Today's report also dismissed the argument that arresting someone for
cannabis offences often leads to officers discovering other serious
crimes.

In the first relaxation of British drugs laws for 30 years Mr Blunkett
wants to move the drug from Class B to Class C, meaning possession will
no longer be an arrestable offence and ranking its harmfulness alongside
tranquillisers and anabolic steroids.

He is considering an as-yet unpublished report from the Advisory Council
on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD), which he commissioned last year, on
whether the drug should be downgraded before making a final announcement
on the move.

Last weekend Liberal Democrats became the first main party to back
legalisation of cannabis as members also voted to adopt the policy of
downgrading ecstasy and scrapping jail sentences for possession of all
drugs, including heroin and cocaine.

Ministers have insisted possession will remain a criminal offence in a
bid to counter suggestions that the policy is "soft on drugs'.

Chief executive of drug charity DrugScope Roger Howard said he hoped the
reclassification of cannabis would stop the inconsistencies in the
police treatment.



 

 

 

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