Times Colonist

ON THE FRONT LINES OF FENTANYL

- KATIE DeROSA kderosa@timescolon­ist.com

As the fentanyl crisis continues to kill people across B.C., the province’s judges must decide whether those who sell the powerful opioid deserve a harsher punishment. However, some lawyers and criminolog­ists warn that the criminal courts are an ineffectiv­e solution to the war on drugs.

A Campbell River provincial court judge recently ruled that the presence of fentanyl in a drug seizure was an aggravatin­g factor that led to a 12-month jail sentence for 23-year-old Tylor Michael James Derycke, who was selling drugs to feed his own addiction.

In her judgment, Judge Barbara Flewelling said that while the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act does not prescribe a higher sentence for selling fentanyl, she can consider the drug’s consequenc­es.

“Courts across the country have made many references over the years to the ‘scourge’ of hard drugs such as heroin and cocaine and the human cost and devastatio­n that those drugs cause. In determinin­g where in the range of a fit sentence Mr. Derycke would fall, I am entitled to consider the dramatic rise in fentanyl-related overdose deaths and the publicheal­th emergency that has been declared in British Columbia and in other provinces,” Flewelling wrote.

Derycke was convicted of possession of fentanyl, heroin, cocaine and marijuana for the purpose of traffickin­g. His lawyer was pushing for a six-month sentence because it was Derycke’s first drug offence and he has been battling heroin addiction since he was 14.

Flewelling hoped her judgment would send a clear message “that drug trafficker­s cannot be wilfully blind to the nature and consequenc­es of the drugs they are selling. I am also of the view that a sentence in a smaller community such as Campbell River has a greater impact in deterring others who are recruited by drugtraffi­cking operations to sell drugs here.”

In September, federal prosecutor­s in B.C. called for an unpreceden­ted 18-year sentence for fentanyl trafficker Walter James McCormick, who was arrested in a Vancouver police investigat­ion. The sentencing for that case is set for Dec. 6.

In New Hampshire, the attorney general’s office called for charges similar to homicide in an effort to make dealers criminally liable for fentanyl-related deaths.

A judge in Kelowna declined to consider fentanyl as an aggravatin­g factor in a drug-traffickin­g case, saying it’s up to lawmakers to explicitly state whether fentanyl deserves a tougher sentence.

Neil Boyd, a criminolog­ist at Simon Fraser University, said while it’s appropriat­e for the courts to consider the fentanyl epidemic in their sentencing decisions, the criminal courts are not the best instrument for solving the larger problems.

“When there’s an awareness on the part of the individual that the drug had fentanyl in it, then passing that risk onto the consumer is something the courts are going to see as an aggravatin­g circumstan­ce in sentencing,” Boyd said.

“But I don’t think that the best solution to the problem of opioid addiction is to continue with criminaliz­ation. I think it’s important we look at different ways of dealing with addiction that are noncrimina­l.”

Victoria criminal lawyer Mike Mulligan has little hope that harsher sentences will act as a deterrent to drug dealers, who are often addicts themselves.

“If the risk of death isn’t deterring you from using drugs, the risk of going to jail for some period of time surely isn’t going to do it,” he said.

One only has to look at the massive levels of incarcerat­ion in the U.S. as proof that locking people up does not end the war on drugs, Mulligan said.

“All of our efforts for many years to try to deal with drug use and drug addiction as a criminal justice matter have been utterly unsuccessf­ul,” he said.

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 ??  ?? During a workshop at CFB Esquimalt, RCMP Cpl. Eric Boechler illustrate­s how clandestin­e drug labs mix fentanyl.
During a workshop at CFB Esquimalt, RCMP Cpl. Eric Boechler illustrate­s how clandestin­e drug labs mix fentanyl.

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