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2 Poly L. Rev. 1 (1976-1977)

handle is hein.journals/polylawr2 and id is 1 raw text is: Volumie2 nol Autumn 1976
£1.25

Law
Review

Contents
The Office of the Attorney General
The Right Hon S C Silkin QC MP
The Criminal Process, Error and Civil Liberties
Howard Levenson LLB BJur
A Mental Patient's Right to Vote
L Gostin BA JD
Mistaken Identity - Beck to Turnbull
A Survey
S J Elgrod, Solicitor
PLR Interviews Peter Hain
James de Siun
Book Reviews
dooks Received

EDITORIAL
3           One issue on which the position of
American President Jimmy Carter
is clear is cannabis. He favours
'decriminalisation'.
The word is an awkward Americanism,
but to 'decriminalise' cannabis is not just
7           a euphemism for legalisation. Its use
would not be officially approved. Rather,
possession of cannabis in small amounts
would be regarded as a minor injraction,
roughly equivalent to a parking violation.
It is the expression of an attitude based
I 7          on civil libertarian principles and a cool
consideration of the purposes of the
criminal law.
Carter's endorsement of this attitude is
neither idiosyncratic nor a slip of the
22          tongue. A federal commission, most of
the members of which had been appointed
by then-President Nixon, came to the
same conclusion in 1972. Eight states
have now put the principle into law,
25          and bills to the same effect are being
introduced in Congress. In a word, it has
become respectable
The1972 report was titled 'Marijuana:
31           a signal of misunderstanding'. Its
recommendations were based partly on a
recognition that the laws on cannabis
32           were having a disastrously divisive effect.
Many young people could see no good
reason why use of their recreational drug
should be a serious crime while alcohol
and tobacco were tolerated and even
encouraged.
This trend is not limited to the United
States. Prison sentences for simple
possession have been abolished in Canada,
and proposals to reduce penalties further
seem likely to become law. South
Australia has taken similar steps, and the
Government ofNew South Wales intends
to follow. Police in Denmark and the
Netherlands have stopped arresting
people for possession of small amounts.
Have they all taken leave of their senses?
After all, cannabis has not yet been proved
to be safe. As for its dangers, a cautious
'not proven' verdict is all that can be
given for charges that the substance is
injurious. Does Britain have the balance
about right in providing a maximum
sentence of six months imprisonment (or
five years on indictment) for possession,

tempered here and there by the leniency
of some magistrates?
In considering the value of any criminal
statute it is useful to ask what purpose it
serves and what it costs. The purpose of
the law prohibiting cannabis is to protect
people from doing injury to themselves,
and, in the opinion of some, to prevent a
rupture in the seamless web of society's
morality. But the injury to be prevented
has not been conclusively demonstrated,
and it pales in comparison with the
effects of alcohol and tobacco. The
proposition that the criminal lau should
be used to preserve a society's dominant
morality is not self-evident. It was
rejected explicitly by the Wofenden
Report on Homosexual Offences and
Prostitution and implicitly by subsequent
changes in the law.
What does it cost? We do not know how
much is spent on enforcement of the law
on cannabis. In terms of human cost, we
know that nearly 8,000 people were
convicted of simple possession last year,
and that 514 were jailed. The relatively
lenient fines imposed by magistrates in
some areas contrast with harsh sentences
in others. Whatever the penalty, the
effect of a criminal conviction on lives
and careers can be disastrous. Also, there
is the unquantifiable effect on the attitudes
of a substantial number of Britons,
many of whom are young and many of
whom are not white, of a law which
makes a crime out of what they see as a
harmless pastime.
It is eighty years since the British Army
Indian Hemp Commission concluded that
moderate use of cannabis produced no
injurious effects. It is nine years since a
full-page advertisement in the Times
denounced the law on cannabis as
'immoral in principle and unworkable in
practice' over the signatures of many of
the famous and near-famous of that
decade. It is eight years since the Wootton
Committee recommended that penalties
should be drastically reduced. That
recommendation was flatly rejected by the
Home Secretary of the day, whose name
was James Callaghan. Is it sensible to
continue with Dr. Callaghan's mixture
as before, or should we try the Carter
prescription ?

P

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