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Kratom: 12,000 prisoners to be released - fast otherwise compensation might need paying


webfact

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55 minutes ago, grandpa said:

I find this very strange as at the time of sentence, Kratom was illegal, hence the conviction was correct and legal as the law stood at that time.  Unless, of course, the new law is retrospective and all those sentenced will receive pardons!

Clearly the latter is the case. 

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48 minutes ago, JonnyF said:

Exactly. I hope this doesn't work the other way around and they do something like make cigarettes illegal and then lock up everyone who smoked in the 2 years prior to the law being passed, while it was still legal to do so. 

 

What a debacle. I suspect this is simply a way to legitimize releasing a load of prisoners due to the Covid situation in the jails.

That would be fine by me.

i quit 21 years ago !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! LOL.

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Amnesty? Full pardon? Record wiped clean?

 

 

The 12,000 figure is surprising, much higher than I would have guessed.

 

That anyone was imprisoned for this well, maybe not so surprising, but still hard to believe.

 

I wonder who the longest Kratom-sentenced serving prisoner is, and how long he's been imprisoned. 

 

 

IMO, all those on minor cannabis charges should be similarly released.

 

 

Who a society chooses to imprison, and how those prisoners are treated, says a lot about a culture and country. In Thailand's case, none of it is good.

 

 

 

 

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2 hours ago, grandpa said:

I find this very strange as at the time of sentence, Kratom was illegal, hence the conviction was correct and legal as the law stood at that time.  Unless, of course, the new law is retrospective and all those sentenced will receive pardons!

 

https://www.tilleke.com/insights/thailand-decriminalizes-kratom-in-amended-narcotics-act/?utm_source=Mondaq&utm_medium=syndication&utm_campaign=LinkedIn-integration

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The new legislation removes kratom from the Narcotics Act list of prohibited substances on the basis that its consumption is a part of traditional Thai cultural norms, and that it is not categorized as a narcotic in the UN Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs (an absence that is also reflected in the narcotics laws of several other countries, including federal laws in the United States).

 

The delisting of kratom as a narcotic will, in turn, trigger the rarely-used Section 2 of the Criminal Code, which expunges convictions and ends pending sentences or ongoing punishments stemming from an activity that is subsequently legalized.

 

 

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