Pubdate: Thur, 11 Mar 1999 Source: Nelson Daily News (Canada) Contact: http://www.nelsondailynews.com/ Author: Gil Puder ONE COPPER TO ANOTHER ON MARIJUANA LAWS To the Editor: It's always nice when people make points for you, particularly amongst one's peers. Although I've spoken out for some time about the self-serving and intellectually dishonest behaviour of police waging a drug war, my words are hardly as eloquent as the comments attributed to Nelson police Sgt. Dan Maluta. Having known Dan since our first year at UBC together, and later as Policy Academy recruits and Vancouver Police colleagues, I must have been negligent in overlooking his scientific expertise. How else could a fellow copper possibly refute the position of the distinguished Lancet, British Medical Journal, and New England Journal of Medicine, all of whom have examined the research and called for the reform of marijuana laws? Perhaps Dan feels, as I do, that our courts should provide direction for a law abiding society. In that case he might care to review the decision of the Provincial Court of British Columbia in R. v. Caine, which in April 1998 granted an absolute discharge to a recreational pot user. This court heard from numerous scientific experts, the Deputy Provincial Health Officer of B.C., reviewed the Annual Reports from that office over several years, and concluded that,the current widespread use of marihuana does not appear to have had any significant impact on the health care system of this province and, more importantly, it has not been perceived by our health care officials as a significant concern, either provincially or nationally. Nonetheless, Dan claims that he can't imagine what kind of doctor would allow access to pot, bolstering his umbrage with a scary and unreferenced claim of "4000 toxins." If spending time with AIDS or cancer victims can't provide Dan with ideas about the need for compassion, then I suggest he devote his health care energies to something really scary: the recent Canadian Medical Association report on obesity, costing Canada about two billion dollars and thousands of lives annually. Certainly a health expert like Sgt. Maluta will now closely monitor his subordinates eating and lifestyle habits, setting a strong example himself to avoid looking like a hypocrite. Cops who are chubby will be locked up until fit and trim. I'll even volunteer to set up a fitness and dietary regimen if a busy man like Dan can't find the time. Of course, I suppose it's possible that Dan might adhere to the example set by the United States' Drug Enforcement Administration, whose own administrative judge reviewed years of scientific research and found that marijuana should be reclassified out of criminal law. It apparently doesn't matter what the science says, us police will ignore it and carry on as we always have. Sgt. Maluta's thirst for knowledge is, however, reflected in his stated desire for clinical marijuana trials - hoping of course that they will refute the current research. How can police possibly claim to be unbiased purveyors of evidence when all we want to know is what we want to hear? All Canadians, including those living in Nelson, deserve something a whole lot better than this. Gil Puder Police Officer, Vancouver Police Dept., Instructor, Criminal Justice Dept., Langara College Instructor, Justice Institute B.C. Police Academy - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck