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Nov 11, 2006 - Feds. to tighten laws on driving while under the influence of drugs;The Conservative government will introduce legislation this month to crack down on drivers who get behind the wheel while high on drugs, Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced Friday, November 10, 2006. The promised bill will increase penalties for drugged drivers, provide police with more tools to detect when motorists are high and promote increased awareness of the problem, the prime minister said. "When most Canadians think of impaired driving, they think of drunk driving," Harper said. "But increasingly, police have to contend with drug-impaired driving: operating a vehicle while under the influence of narcotics. Just like a drunk driver, a drug-impaired driver presents a danger, to himself or herself and to others."
Vancouver Sun, June 7, 2003 EditorialBC
Attorney-General Geoff Plant noted that the gun registry is an "unmitigated
disaster" and the province won't prosecute those who don't register
their guns.
April Lindgren in Toronto and Tim Naumetz in Ottawa The Ottawa Citizen Wednesday, June 04, 2003 The Ontario government is joining Nova Scotia and three western provinces in refusing to prosecute people who have not registered rifles or shotguns by July 1 as required by the federal government's controversial firearms registry law."We just view this as another area where they should take responsibility for a badly flawed piece of legislation which really persecutes the wrong people, innocent people, good people who want to use long firearms for hunting, recreational use," Ontario Attorney General Norm Sterling said yesterday.Provincial governments have a duty to enforce and prosecute the federal firearms law even if they oppose it for political reasons, said Solicitor General Wayne Easter after the Liberal cabinet meeting in Ottawa.Mr. Easter said yesterday that the federal government will rely on the RCMP to enforce the firearms registry now that five provinces have declared they will not prosecute gun owners who fail to register their firearms by a June 30 deadline.In Toronto, Mr. Sterling said Ontario decided back in January that it would refer charges laid under the federal Firearms Act to federal prosecutors "unless they are related to other criminal activities and related to other Criminal Code offences."Basically (the gun registry) has nothing to do with preventing crime," Mr. Sterling told reporters. "It creates a lot of problems in rural Ontario (for) hunters, gun clubs, and those kinds of people who are law-abiding citizens, who have long been law-abiding citizens."Their law is being driven by the false promise that this registry is somehow going to somehow enhance our ability to catch criminals, to prosecute criminals, to put criminals behind bars. This particular legislation has nothing to do with that."Yesterday, Nova Scotia Justice Minister Jamie Muir directed the province's Public Prosecution Service to refer Criminal Code and Firearms Act charges involving the registration of rifles and shotguns to federal prosecutors."It's their law, let them enforce it," said Mr. Muir. "We believe the public is served best when our prosecution service focuses on serious criminal matters; it makes no sense to clog up the courts with procedural matters on long-gun registrations."Nova Scotia and Ontario have joined Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba, whose governments previously said they will not prosecute the registration provisions of the Canadian Firearms Act once the deadline for registration of all firearms expires at the end of June.Mr. Easter, who earlier in the week ruled out an extension of the deadline for more than 500,000 gun owners who have so far failed to either register their rifles and shotguns or re-register handguns that had been registered under the previous law, played down the provincial opposition."It's my job to ensure that the law is upheld and the RCMP will uphold the laws of the country," said Mr. Easter.He added, however, that he still expects the provincial governments to enforce the laws of the land, regardless of their political views."Governments have a responsibility, in my view, as well as law enforcement agencies, to uphold the laws of the land, and it's up to the province to prosecute under those laws," said Mr. Easter. "I want to underline very, very specifically that it is not our intent to go after legitimate gun owners. It is our intent to have them register under the system so that we can in fact have safer communities and safer streets."As of this week, the Canadian Firearms Centre reported 1.5 million of an estimated 2.3 million gun owners now have at least one registration certificate in the registry system. The firearms centre last April 15 reported 294,301 individuals still had to register long guns and 338,121 still had to re-register handguns. The agency said then it had a backlog of 177,897 applications to register, while 207,000 were registered to museums, public agencies and dealer inventories. Canada
Introduces Measure Adjusting Penalties for Marijuana
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