Tuesday, April 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Justin Trudeau Says His Father Got His Brother Help In Dealing With Pot Charge

The Canadian Press, 25 Apr, 2017 11:40 AM
    TORONTO — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says his younger brother, Michel, was able to avoid a criminal record after he was caught with marijuana because of his father's connections.
     
    Trudeau revealed the little-known fact about his brother, who died in a B.C. avalanche about 20 years ago, during a broadcast interview with Vice Media on Monday night about the government's plan to legalize marijuana.
     
    He said six months before Michel's death, he was charged with possession of marijuana after he was involved in a collision on the highway while he was driving home to Montreal from the West Coast. Police had found a Sucrets box with a couple of joints inside when they were helping him collect his belongings that were scattered across the highway.
     
    Trudeau said his father contacted his friends in the legal community to get Michel a good lawyer.
     
    "He was very confident that we were able to make those charges go away," Trudeau said of his father, former prime minister Pierre Trudeau. "We were able to do that because we had resources, my dad had a couple connections and we were confident that my little brother wasn't going to be saddled with a criminal record for life."
     
     
    Trudeau used the anecdote to highlight how minorities and people with little means often don't have the option to clear their name in the justice system — something he said legalizing the drug will help fix.
     
    "That's one of the fundamental unfairnesses of this current system is that it affects different communities in a different way," he said.
     
    Trudeau stuck to his government's stance that the move to legalize marijuana for recreational use by July 1, 2018, doesn't mean lax law enforcement during the transition period.
     
    However, he suggested that the government will look at ways to help people charged with marijuana possession. Although he did not give specifics, he said the government would only look into the matter once the laws have been changed.
     
    "Until we actually change the law, we can't take steps towards moving retroactively," Trudeau said.
     
    "In the meantime, our focus is on making sure we're changing the legislation to fix what's broken about a system that is hurting Canadians ... and then we'll take steps to look at what we can do for those people who have criminal records for something that would no longer be criminal."
     
    The newly tabled legislation will allow people 18 and older to publicly possess up to 30 grams of dried cannabis, or its equivalent in non-dried form.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Winnipeg Woman Fined For Posing As A Nurse To Get Job, Access To Drugs

    Winnipeg Woman Fined For Posing As A Nurse To Get Job, Access To Drugs
    WINNIPEG — A Manitoba nurse has been ordered to pay $10,000 for posing as another nurse to gain access to narcotics.

    Winnipeg Woman Fined For Posing As A Nurse To Get Job, Access To Drugs

    Kinder Surprise: Woman Gets 3 Years For Trafficking Drugs In Chocolate Eggs

    Kinder Surprise: Woman Gets 3 Years For Trafficking Drugs In Chocolate Eggs
    Bonny Maddaford, who is 45, pleaded guilty last month to trafficking cocaine, trafficking marijuana and breach of trust.

    Kinder Surprise: Woman Gets 3 Years For Trafficking Drugs In Chocolate Eggs

    B.C. Greens Promise To Balance Budget, Make Tax System More Progressive

    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's Green party is hoping its promise to balance the province's books will shore up the group's economic credentials and translate into more support at the ballot box come election day.

    B.C. Greens Promise To Balance Budget, Make Tax System More Progressive

    Man Charged After Female TV Reporter Hit With Sexist ‘FHRITP’ Slur In Newfoundland: Police

    Man Charged After Female TV Reporter Hit With Sexist ‘FHRITP’ Slur In Newfoundland: Police
    A 27-year-old Newfoundland man has been charged for allegedly yelling a sexually explicit phrase at a TV journalist, who went to police with the complaint because she said she has had enough of being harassed with the vulgar comments.

    Man Charged After Female TV Reporter Hit With Sexist ‘FHRITP’ Slur In Newfoundland: Police

    'Somebody Knows Something:' Police Rule Death Of Calgary Baby In 2015 A Homicide

    Calgary Police Insp. Don Coleman say Cyrus Nel was found in need of medical attention in August 2015 at his family home after a 911 call.

    'Somebody Knows Something:' Police Rule Death Of Calgary Baby In 2015 A Homicide

    Trump's New Threat, After Lumber Tax, On Canadian Dairy: 'Watch!'

    Trump's New Threat, After Lumber Tax, On Canadian Dairy: 'Watch!'
    The president tweeted Tuesday: "Canada has made business for our dairy farmers in Wisconsin and other border states very difficult. We will not stand for this. Watch!"

    Trump's New Threat, After Lumber Tax, On Canadian Dairy: 'Watch!'

    PrevNext