A Store Selling Heroin, Meth, and Cocaine Just Opened in Canada

Started by viper37, May 04, 2023, 01:08:32 PM

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viper37


QuoteVANCOUVER- A Vancouver man has opened the only known brick-and-mortar store in Canada and the U.S. that sells heroin, cocaine, meth, MDMA, and other drugs.

Jerry Martin, 51, opened the Drugs Store Wednesday in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, a neighborhood that's long been considered ground zero for Canada's overdose epidemic. While British Columbia has very progressive drug laws, the mobile shop is operating completely illegally. The province recently began a three-year drug decriminalization pilot project for possession of small amounts of opioids, cocaine, meth, and MDMA, but selling remains prohibited.

However, Martin told VICE News he opened the store because he wants to give people drugs that have been tested and are free from adulterants, including fentanyl. Although fentanyl, which is driving record overdoses in Canada and the U.S., is the primary street opioid that Vancouverites now use, Martin is instead selling heroin.

"People are dying," Martin said. "Especially now, they've allowed the entire province to do these drugs... But they've provided no clean, safe supply. They're getting it from the same supply that everybody's overdosing from."

More than 11,000 British Columbians have died of a drug overdose since 2016, when the province declared the issue a public health emergency.
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Martin said he'd be selling people a max of 2.5 grams of each drug, with serving sizes as small as a point (one-tenth of a gram). Under B.C.'s decriminalization policy, a person can have up to 2.5 grams of the aforementioned substances in total without facing criminal consequences. He's charging roughly street prices, with grams of cocaine and meth going for $90 and $50, respectively.

He'll be checking IDs to make sure customers are at least 18 and said he wants them to sign a waiver indicating that they've previously used the drugs they're purchasing.

He's also started an online shop with a delivery service that carries more drugs than he has in store, such as ketamine, LSD, and 5-MeO-DMT, a synthetic version of a chemical that comes from the bufo alvarius toad and is considered one of the most powerful psychedelics on Earth.

Opening the store hasn't been an easy feat for Martin, who struggled to find a location (he originally wanted a non-mobile storefront) and financial backing. He has a criminal conviction for cannabis trafficking and said it's impacted his credit. He's also been bouncing around between hotels and Airbnbs, as some property owners have kicked him out after reading about his plans in previous news stories.

He wore a stab-proof vest as a precaution Wednesday and said he's keeping a minimal amount of drugs on site to reduce the risk of robbery.

Sourcing the different drugs has been a challenge, he said, noting it took him two years to find a heroin supplier. Heroin, once the predominant illicit opioid in North America, has largely been replaced by fentanyl, which is easier and cheaper to manufacture and smuggle.

Martin runs a real risk of being arrested. If that happens, his lawyer Paul Lewin has already prepared arguments to launch a constitutional challenge.

"He would allege that laws that prevent a safe supply and result in death by poisoning contravene section 7 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms and must be struck down," Lewin wrote in a letter to Martin's potential landlords and business partners.
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Under Section 7 of the Charter, which was used to strike down medical cannabis restrictions, Canadians have "the right to life, liberty, and security of the person and the right not to be deprived thereof except in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice."

In Canada, the maximum penalty for selling Schedule I or II drugs is life in prison.

Martin started using drugs at 14 and was addicted to alcohol and injecting cocaine by age 15. He was unhoused for the next 15 years, he said, living in Langley, B.C,, Oshawa, Ontario, and other Canadian cities.

He said he was moved to open the store when his stepbrother, Gord Rennie, died of an overdose last year. Rennie, who was addicted to benzo dope—a deadly cocktail of fentanyl and ultra potent benzodiazepines, was featured in the VICE News Tonight documentary Beyond Fentanyl.

A couple months after VICE News interviewed Rennie, he was found dead under a bridge.

Martin said he regrets not letting Rennie stay with him when he got out of his most recent stint in prison.

"My mom said I should invite him over and I didn't and he died that day," he said.

He said one of his other brothers was stabbed to death over drugs in 2000.

Martin said all the drugs he's selling have been tested at Get Your Drugs Tested, a Vancouver facility that uses a fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy machine to detect what's in people's drugs.

His hope is to open franchises of The Drugs Store around the country, similar to what happened with grey market cannabis dispensaries.

Karen Ward, a Vancouver-based independent drug policy analyst, said the store is an "inevitable result of the government doing nothing" in terms of setting up a widely accessible safe supply of all drugs. While small safe supply programs for opioid users exist, providing people with pharmaceutical grade heroin and fentanyl as an alternative to street drugs, harm reduction advocates argue they're not widespread enough. They also don't cover drugs like cocaine and meth.

Ward said the city should give Martin a license to operate legally.
I don't do meditation.  I drink alcohol to relax, like normal people.

If Microsoft Excel decided to stop working overnight, the world would practically end.


Jacob


viper37

I don't do meditation.  I drink alcohol to relax, like normal people.

If Microsoft Excel decided to stop working overnight, the world would practically end.

Barrister

So sometimes slippery slopes are indeed slippery.  This is the next logical step after legalizing cannabis and decriminalizing hard drugs.

Curious to see what police do.  Such a store is of course blatantly against the law, and 5(1) CDSA (trafficking in a controlled substance) can attract serious jail time.  But there's certainly some precedent for police turning a blind eye.

The supposed s. 7 challenge is pretty suspect - it was tried and failed 20 years ago when it came to marijuana in R v Malmo-Levine.  Not that the court can't change it's mind over time - look at the different results in TWU v BC Teachers (2001) and TWU v Law Society BC (2018).
Posts here are my own private opinions.  I do not speak for my employer.

HVC

Hope they have good security, I see a lot of break ins in their future.
Being lazy is bad; unless you still get what you want, then it's called "patience".
Hubris must be punished. Severely.

Josquius

I thought cracks whole selling point was like cocaine but cheaper?

Good to see anyway. It's the sensible way to tackle drug issues.
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Barrister

Quote from: Josquius on May 04, 2023, 03:04:04 PMI thought cracks whole selling point was like cocaine but cheaper?

Good to see anyway. It's the sensible way to tackle drug issues.

Is it though?  Is selling drugs to addicts really a good way to handle drug addiction?

Because it's not like there aren't other options out there.  In Canada you can get access to methadone, which is an opioid.  It's very long-acting so you only need one dose per day.

And this guy is still buying the drugs from someone else who is illegally importing it, so you're still supporting organized crime.

Posts here are my own private opinions.  I do not speak for my employer.

HisMajestyBOB

A good friend of mine is moving back to Vancouver. I'll have to stop by when I pay him a visit. For research.  :ph34r:
Three lovely Prada points for HoI2 help

Duque de Bragança

Tested supply? By whom?
Could be a highly sought out position.  :P

mongers

"We have it in our power to begin the world over again"

crazy canuck

Quote from: Barrister on May 04, 2023, 01:40:05 PMSo sometimes slippery slopes are indeed slippery.  This is the next logical step after legalizing cannabis and decriminalizing hard drugs.

Curious to see what police do.  Such a store is of course blatantly against the law, and 5(1) CDSA (trafficking in a controlled substance) can attract serious jail time.  But there's certainly some precedent for police turning a blind eye.

The supposed s. 7 challenge is pretty suspect - it was tried and failed 20 years ago when it came to marijuana in R v Malmo-Levine.  Not that the court can't change it's mind over time - look at the different results in TWU v BC Teachers (2001) and TWU v Law Society BC (2018).

And sometimes right wing panic is just right wing panic.

He expects to be arrested. He wants to be arrested to make the constitutional challenge. As you point out, he will likely be unsuccessful.  But the Malmo-Levine case was a step in the path of moving toward legalization and a safe supply.

Or we could just keep watching people die.

If you want to listen to him being interviewed yesterday, here is the link.  https://www.cbc.ca/listen/live-radio/1-46-on-the-coast/clip/15982435-local-man-opens-drug-store-sells-cocaine-mdma


Josquius

Quote from: Barrister on May 04, 2023, 03:15:59 PM
Quote from: Josquius on May 04, 2023, 03:04:04 PMI thought cracks whole selling point was like cocaine but cheaper?

Good to see anyway. It's the sensible way to tackle drug issues.

Is it though?  Is selling drugs to addicts really a good way to handle drug addiction?

Because it's not like there aren't other options out there.  In Canada you can get access to methadone, which is an opioid.  It's very long-acting so you only need one dose per day.

And this guy is still buying the drugs from someone else who is illegally importing it, so you're still supporting organized crime.


Perfect is the enemy of good.

I'm seeing another layer of abstraction from directly interacting with the crooks for buyers and reduced risk of bad doses.
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Barrister

Quote from: Josquius on May 04, 2023, 03:53:11 PM
Quote from: Barrister on May 04, 2023, 03:15:59 PM
Quote from: Josquius on May 04, 2023, 03:04:04 PMI thought cracks whole selling point was like cocaine but cheaper?

Good to see anyway. It's the sensible way to tackle drug issues.

Is it though?  Is selling drugs to addicts really a good way to handle drug addiction?

Because it's not like there aren't other options out there.  In Canada you can get access to methadone, which is an opioid.  It's very long-acting so you only need one dose per day.

And this guy is still buying the drugs from someone else who is illegally importing it, so you're still supporting organized crime.


Perfect is the enemy of good.

I'm seeing another layer of abstraction from directly interacting with the crooks for buyers and reduced risk of bad doses.

So here's the thing: we've already had this experiment in Canada.  We legalized cannabis about 5 years ago.  Legalization has had several positive effects: it's lead to the development of a thriving industry, it takes several cases out of the court system.

But it's also led to an increase in cannabis use.  From 2017 (the last year before legalization) to 2021 the number of Canadians who use cannabis increased from 22% to 27%.  You might say "well that's only a 5 point increase" - but actually it's a 20% increase in the number of Canadians who use cannabis - and the biggest increases have come from younger people.  And the number still seems to be ticking upwards.



So yes, having a safe, legal supply will definitely help to prevent overdoses and death.  But it's going to inevitably increase the amount of drugs available and the number of addicts.  I'm not sure that's a trade-off worth making.

Posts here are my own private opinions.  I do not speak for my employer.

HVC

You're really strung up on cannabis. You should smoke some weed, it'll relax you :P


On a more serious note, weed doesn't seem that bad. I'm not a smoker, tried it but don't like it. Having grown up around drinkers (both family drunks and parents owning a bar) alcohol appears a whole lot worse. If ones legal why not the other. And that ends my attempt at whataboutism :D
Being lazy is bad; unless you still get what you want, then it's called "patience".
Hubris must be punished. Severely.