I have dedicated over 31 years of my life as a cop, finishing my police career as a chief. Most of that time was spent on Vancouver's streets on beats related to drugs and gangs.
Fighting the war on cannabis and the violent gangs that feed off the conflict took up a vast amount of my time. The gangs and gangsters I pursued are too numerous to mention, but include household names such as the UN gang, the Hells Angels, Independent Soldiers, and Bindy Johal. These and other notorious B.C. gangsters profited by selling and exporting marijuana, while using the massive profits to import cocaine and guns into our province.
Our efforts to curtail gang wars over the cannabis industry were time-consuming, dangerous and expensive, up to and above $1 million per murder investigation. I led teams that had record-breaking arrests while removing enormous amounts of drugs from our streets. However, the successes that we enjoyed over the past three decades proved short-lived and ultimately fruitless.
In the early 1990s, I began to fully recognize the futility and the social, economic and public health costs of continuing marijuana prohibition.
And I came to one inescapable conclusion - cannabis prohibition fuels gang violence in B.C. All of the vaunted and much publicized policing efforts to control gang violence and the marijuana industry -- the Uniformed Gang Task Force, the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team, the Marijuana Enforcement Teams, the hiring of hundreds more police offices across B.C., civil forfeiture laws and tougher sentencing -- have had little if any impact on the huge, highly profitable sector. In fact, costly law enforcement efforts have only served to drive the marijuana industry deeper into the hands of violent organized crime groups.
While working as the commanding officer of the drug unit and working towards a Masters degree in criminology, I researched why massive investments in law enforcement did not reduce marijuana use or related crime. The reason? Money. The marijuana industry in B.C. is estimated to be worth up to $7 billion annually. The profits generated are enormous and, for some, worth killing for. When gang members are convicted and jailed, new and violent gang members are only too eager to use intimidation, guns and murder to take their place.
FIGHTING A LOSING BATTLE
Many of my colleagues in policing and the criminal justice system understood that we were fighting a losing battle, and privately expressed their support to overturn marijuana prohibition and implement a strictly regulated system of marijuana sales to adults.
At the same time, I took the concerns I was hearing privately and aired them publicly. In November 2001, I appeared before a Senate Special Committee on Illegal Drugs. My message to the Upper House was three-pronged: Pot prohibition doesn't work. It leads to violence, massive costs to the taxpayer, and no reductions in supply or use. And alternatives, including regulation, should be considered.
When I suggested that marijuana prohibition has failed and contributes to organized crime, I took significant heat from others in the law enforcement community. Police chiefs coalesced around the unworkable status quo. Privately, within my department, I received more support. Many cops had had enough of the illicit marijuana industry's ongoing succession of violence and death, with no end in sight. However, when your job, your pension, and your family's livelihood are at stake, I understand the average cop's hesitancy to step out of line and publicly question their superiors.
Today, I must speak for the police officers who cannot.
The endless cycle of gang violence must stop. I have joined Stop the Violence BC, a coalition of law enforcement officials, legal experts, medical and public health officials, and academic experts concerned about the links between cannabis prohibition in B.C. and the growth of organized crime and related violence in the province.
STVBC has enlisted current and former B.C. mayors, police officers, attorneys general, health officers and others to help overturn cannabis prohibition and implement a strictly regulated market for the adult consumption of cannabis. As with the end of alcohol prohibition in the 1930s, marijuana regulation today will remove the profits that drive gang violence and create safer, healthier communities.
Today, under cannabis prohibition, youth have easier access to marijuana than alcohol or tobacco. As a law enforcement leader and former minister of public safety who has spent more than 33 years creating and enforcing laws, I know that a strictly regulated marijuana market for adult cannabis use would better protect youth through the use of regulatory tools that have proven so effective in reducing tobacco use.
The taxes resulting from a regulated cannabis market could support our most important public programs, including health and education. Rather than enforcing unworkable laws that breed violence, police would be free to focus on laws that actually protect citizens and improve public safety.
Unfortunately, despite our best efforts and majority support from British Columbians to reform existing cannabis laws, prohibition remains. It appears nothing has changed since my days on the street. In fact, recent headlines suggest events are worse. Randy Naicker, gang member, shot dead. A Red Scorpion leader gunned down. A full-patch member of the Hells Angels wounded in a public attack. Jonathan Bacon, killed outside a waterfront hotel in Kelowna. Innocent bystanders in the wrong place at the wrong time. Retaliation.
For now, until we enact sensible cannabis laws, the beat goes on...
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Kids today though self administer a lot more than marijuana. Tell them "It's drugs" and they drop it into their own drinks. Why? For the same reason they get loaded before going out. It is cheaper, faster, and in their opinion cleaner. Legalize pot but you'll still have the street problems. It is just that grass won't be that big a part of it.
Legalize it and potheads become the same as alcoholics, and maybe replace some. Not a huge problem.
Will potheads be able to sue employers who forbid pot use at work or fire users for being impaired at work?
First, develop reliable tests for pot -in-blood content for impaired driving and crime detection.
Then set up health insurance costs for users.
Then talk legalization.
I bet it will degenerate into the old smoker menace that we are trying to control --- foul mouths, butts, dirty ashtrays and their costs, and obnoxious smoking behaviour. now dog owners have taken that role -- doggie too everywhere; can't even take kids to parks.
and reduce cost per gram to 1$ making sure that other NON govt growers aren't going to do massive profits on it no more. after ten years you can sub out to a few differant companies per region. and then its a business after that like any other.then one can have seeds cost a fair bit and hten allow everyone to grow it and anyone using it has to pay a pot tax kinda like a drivers liscnese....
loads a ways to get to it....
and gives it to abuse programs and maybe even allows current levels of officers and pay to stay as is for a few years and go after other types of crime...
The drug 'war' all these years has been beyond stupid. It brings into question the very nature of the political process when our 'leaders' are so gutless they won't even venture a personal opinion, never mind follow the logical, common senses approach of legalization.
They are not alone. Obama in the US needs to grow a set and take a stand on something.
The only downside... higher unemployment. Pretty near everybody knows at least one person in this 'underground' economy that doesn't need a real job. 7 billion a year keeps a lot of car dealerships in business.
then you have a way to do this faster instead fo a longer 20 year time line one could do this in 10 or ten and if you did 1.4 million homes a year in 6 years its bringing in more then it costs, and at its end would mean at least 5-7 billion extra on top of the weed tax itself so you go right out of debt and into surplus in 10 years, and at +1 billion or so that can be given to tax payers as a cut in taxes.
they already are getting 5 grand to spend so its a win win for all....imagine that pot helped to pay for solar arrays and then all our oil we can toss up for sale....
"Some entrepreneur" will add more toxins to sell more pot to women, teens, and younger kids!
I saw and smelled the disgusting, acrid smell leaking past towelled door of bathroom in a hospital!
Kills your entire argument. If your going to legalize stop judging entirely! This sort of garbage just continues the black market!