UK: Police Plan Clamp Down On Shops Accused Of Glamorising Drug Use

Jim Finnel

Fallen Cannabis Warrior & Ex News Moderator
The businesses, known as "head shops", operate entirely within the law but the Association of Chief Police Officers (Acpo) is devising new rules on how police and local councils can work together to combat "community concerns" about the stores.

The guidelines are expected to see police and trading standards officers demanding changes to the way stores operate, and could even lead to the authorities demanding that items are taken off display.

Head shops, which first surfaced in the 1960s, offer a range of products linked with illegal drug-taking such as hookahs, "bongs" or water pipes, scales for weighing drugs and machines to grind substances such as herbal cannabis.

Many also offer "legal alternatives" to cannabis, as well as T-shirts and other products bearing images of cannabis leaves or marijuana cigarettes and which depict drug use in a positive light.

Tim Hollis, Acpo drugs spokesman and chief constable of Humberside, said: "There are concerns that head shops make drugs seem legal. It is not illegal for these shops to exist and there are things local authorities and the police can do.

"It is not as simple as making them illegal, but we will be producing good practice guidelines to give ideas on how to solve the problems, because the shops are causing concern for communities."

An Acpo spokeswoman declined to give any further details of how the guidelines will operate, or what powers officers propose to use against businesses whose activities are not breaking the law.

Neighbourhood police teams are expected to play a key role in the new project, working with council departments and other agencies to decide which shops to target.

The National Policing Improvement Agency has set up a team which is developing the new document.

A spokesman for the agency said: "The NPIA is working on guidance for Acpo which is due to be released to forces around March of this year."


News Hawk: User: 420 MAGAZINE ® - Medical Marijuana Publication & Social Networking
Source: Telegraph.co.uk
Author: David Barrett
Copyright: 2008 Telegraph Media Group Limited
Contact: Contact us - Telegraph
Website: Police plan clamp down on shops accused of glamorising drug use - Telegraph
 
An Acpo spokeswoman declined to give any further details of how the guidelines will operate, or what powers officers propose to use against businesses whose activities are not breaking the law.

Lovers of freedom should recoil at this mindset.
 
It seems the UK is becoming the poster child for government tyranny in the world today.

The story remains the same. A new glass pipe being sold in a shop is just exactly that... a piece of glass. Until it is used to consume a controlled substance, it is no more illegal then your grandmas flower vase.

The fact that they think they can stretch the definition of illegal so far as to include t-shirts with pot leaves is very concerning indeed. It's downright scarey to think a t-shirt could be regulated just because it is displaying a symbol certain people don't approve of. What's next? What's next is banning certain words, phrases, books, literature, and religious beliefs a select few people don't like.

Sounds an awful lot like the formation of a Nazi police-state to me. :peace:
 
It's downright scarey to think a t-shirt could be regulated just because it is displaying a symbol certain people don't approve of. What's next? What's next is banning certain words, phrases, books, liturature, and religious beliefs a select few people don't like.

I just don't know how we managed to get by all these years before these helpful people came along to decide what opinions we should have and how we ought to be living our lives. /Sarc
 
Back
Top Bottom