I was landed on a documentary last night about a Canadian woman who had been fooled into visiting a person she thought was a friend in Columbia. After she took him up on his offer to invite her to visit him in Columbia, his organization kidnapped her and tried to pressure her to become a drug mule to smuggle cocaine into Canada under an artificial pregnant belly by refusing to allow her to return home to Canada until she agreed.
She refused for days so they starved her, eventually drugged her, raped her, and finally gave her an ultimatum between becoming a drug mule or a prostitute. She chose the former the day after she was raped.
Though she did have a few opportunities to contact authorities, fear gripped her each time she encountered an officer due to her mental state of mind at the time. Consequently, in her state of mind, she decided to just smuggle the drugs and get it over with.
She got caught at the airport before she had a chance to board the flight for Canada and consequently got charged with drug trafficking. Since she could not identify the acquaintance to the judge or provide his exact address, etc. or prove that she'd been trafficked, her counsel advised a plea bargain of 4 years of house arrest in Columbia. In a sense, if her story is true, the justice system essentially victimized her yet again.
Though I accept that we cannot know whether her story is true or not, apparently it was never proved untrue either. With that in mind, could a narcotics-amnesty law help to protect trafficked drug mules? For example, what if the law required customs to present a declarations gate prior to the investigations gate and to grant amnesty to any person who declares all illegal narcotics in his possession at the declarations gate before heading to the investigations gate? I can see two advantages with this:
1. It could result in a non-victimized drug mule getting cold feet and revealing all of his narcotics at the customs gate. When we consider that probably many narcotics get through undetected simply due to officers not having the time to check every nook and cranny on (and even in) each and every piece of luggage and even body of each and every passenger, a drug mule who gets cold feet could end up declaring narcotics that customs might otherwise never have discovered. Consequently, allowing amnesty for self-declarations at the declarations gate could achieve the goal of reducing the availability of narcotics in Canada (which to my mind from a public-health-and-safety standpoint is more important than just punishing a person who might have smuggled many kilograms of narcotics into the country before already).
2. It could give a trafficking victim the confidence to reveal his situation without fear of punishment for having drugs in his possession that his trafficker had forcefully attached to his body against his will for example. Though it's true that if the trafficker is traveling with him and is standing right next to him, his state of mind could be such that he would fear reprisals. A simple solution would be to require each person to step forward to the customs gate individually with the exception of people and their dependents. This way, the declarations officer would more probably be communicating with the victim one on one with the trafficker standing behind a line at least a few feet behind his victim, at least far enough away to make it difficult for him to hear the conversation. The gate could also have blinders on the sides to make lip-reading more difficult and to further muffle sound. Signs could be present before a person reaches the customs gate making it clear in multiple languages that any trafficked drug mule can declare any narcotics in his possession to the declarations officer without fear of punishment even if he cannot prove that he has been trafficked, but that this amnesty no longer applies if he does not declare all narcotics in his possession prior to passing the declarations gate to head to the investigations gate.
I think such a policy would have advantages beyond just protecting trafficking victims. It could encourage more people who might otherwise succeed in smuggling narcotics to turn them in voluntarily. Obviously amnesty does not mean that we will not confiscate the drug none-the-less. It also would not protect him if evidence comes to light later that ha had trafficked other narcotics in Canada other than the ones he declared at that gate.
In exchange for this, we could toughen the punishment that would apply to those who go past the declarations gate without having declared all narcotics in their possession. Think of it as a good cop bad cop approach. If a person is unsure, he might want to check all of his bags before reaching the declarations gate and if he does find drugs in his possession, then he'll know that it's best to declare them and hand them in.
What would be your thoughts on such a narcotics-amnesty law?
All the above being said, I would not be opposed to making heroin and other narcotics trafficking a capital offense. This way, when we consider the contrast between amnesty at the declarations gate and capital punishment at the investigations gate, many traffickers could decide that they're not in the mood to play Russian roulette with their lives anymore.
She refused for days so they starved her, eventually drugged her, raped her, and finally gave her an ultimatum between becoming a drug mule or a prostitute. She chose the former the day after she was raped.
Though she did have a few opportunities to contact authorities, fear gripped her each time she encountered an officer due to her mental state of mind at the time. Consequently, in her state of mind, she decided to just smuggle the drugs and get it over with.
She got caught at the airport before she had a chance to board the flight for Canada and consequently got charged with drug trafficking. Since she could not identify the acquaintance to the judge or provide his exact address, etc. or prove that she'd been trafficked, her counsel advised a plea bargain of 4 years of house arrest in Columbia. In a sense, if her story is true, the justice system essentially victimized her yet again.
Though I accept that we cannot know whether her story is true or not, apparently it was never proved untrue either. With that in mind, could a narcotics-amnesty law help to protect trafficked drug mules? For example, what if the law required customs to present a declarations gate prior to the investigations gate and to grant amnesty to any person who declares all illegal narcotics in his possession at the declarations gate before heading to the investigations gate? I can see two advantages with this:
1. It could result in a non-victimized drug mule getting cold feet and revealing all of his narcotics at the customs gate. When we consider that probably many narcotics get through undetected simply due to officers not having the time to check every nook and cranny on (and even in) each and every piece of luggage and even body of each and every passenger, a drug mule who gets cold feet could end up declaring narcotics that customs might otherwise never have discovered. Consequently, allowing amnesty for self-declarations at the declarations gate could achieve the goal of reducing the availability of narcotics in Canada (which to my mind from a public-health-and-safety standpoint is more important than just punishing a person who might have smuggled many kilograms of narcotics into the country before already).
2. It could give a trafficking victim the confidence to reveal his situation without fear of punishment for having drugs in his possession that his trafficker had forcefully attached to his body against his will for example. Though it's true that if the trafficker is traveling with him and is standing right next to him, his state of mind could be such that he would fear reprisals. A simple solution would be to require each person to step forward to the customs gate individually with the exception of people and their dependents. This way, the declarations officer would more probably be communicating with the victim one on one with the trafficker standing behind a line at least a few feet behind his victim, at least far enough away to make it difficult for him to hear the conversation. The gate could also have blinders on the sides to make lip-reading more difficult and to further muffle sound. Signs could be present before a person reaches the customs gate making it clear in multiple languages that any trafficked drug mule can declare any narcotics in his possession to the declarations officer without fear of punishment even if he cannot prove that he has been trafficked, but that this amnesty no longer applies if he does not declare all narcotics in his possession prior to passing the declarations gate to head to the investigations gate.
I think such a policy would have advantages beyond just protecting trafficking victims. It could encourage more people who might otherwise succeed in smuggling narcotics to turn them in voluntarily. Obviously amnesty does not mean that we will not confiscate the drug none-the-less. It also would not protect him if evidence comes to light later that ha had trafficked other narcotics in Canada other than the ones he declared at that gate.
In exchange for this, we could toughen the punishment that would apply to those who go past the declarations gate without having declared all narcotics in their possession. Think of it as a good cop bad cop approach. If a person is unsure, he might want to check all of his bags before reaching the declarations gate and if he does find drugs in his possession, then he'll know that it's best to declare them and hand them in.
What would be your thoughts on such a narcotics-amnesty law?
All the above being said, I would not be opposed to making heroin and other narcotics trafficking a capital offense. This way, when we consider the contrast between amnesty at the declarations gate and capital punishment at the investigations gate, many traffickers could decide that they're not in the mood to play Russian roulette with their lives anymore.