Cannabis cases threatened by urgent surveillance law change
Cannabis cases threatened by urgent surveillance law
change
The Video Camera Surveillance
(Temporary Measures) Bill will
potentially apply
primarily to cannabis cases as the court already has
the
ability to use covert video evidence in serious drug cases,
Aotearoa
Legalise Cannabis Party leader and Wellington
lawyer Michael Appleby
says.
Although the Supreme Court
decision prompting the new law was based on
the Urewera
trial, John Key has said the decision affected
"serious
crimes" including drug offences.
However many
legal experts including the Chief Human
Rights
Commissioner have testified that “serious
criminals” can already be
prosecuted using covert
surveillance under section 30 of the Evidence
Act.
Just
as Tame Iti is still being prosecuted as a participant of
an
organised criminal group, even though the evidence was
thrown out by the
Supreme Court in most other Urewera
cases.
“Therefore this urgent retrospective law change
is potentially actually
going to affect non-serious
cases, including many of the 250 people
arrested in
Operation Lime,” Mr Appleby said.
In May 2010 Police
concluded a two year “National Covert
Operation”
called Operation Lime targeting garden shops
including Switched on
Gardener, with the aim to ‘break
the backbone of the cannabis industry’.
“In light of
the recent findings of the NZ Law Commission and UN
Global
Commission on Drugs, cannabis charges could fail
to meet the threshold
for seriousness under the Evidence
Act.”
“In addition, the Bill of Rights may have been
violated when customers
went to these shops for
legitimate reasons and were filmed by
surveillance
cameras.”
“Since ACT leader, Dr. Don Brash, is a
supporter of cannabis law
reform, the Act Party should
oppose this bill when voted on under
urgency next
week,” Mr Appleby said.
The ALCP are also supporting
United Future candidate Ian Gaskin
(Wigram) who in a
letter in yesterday’s Press has called for a
liberal
alliance of parties in support of Dr Brash's
views on
cannabis.
ENDS