Moved by Baroness Williams of Trafford That the Grand Committee do
consider the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971 (Amendment) Order
2022. The Minister of State, Home Office (Baroness Williams of
Trafford) (Con) My Lords, I thank the Advisory Council on
the Misuse of Drugs for its advice, which has helped to
inform the order for consideration today. The advice, published on
20 November 2020, recommended that three drugs be moved from class
C to class B of...Request free trial
Moved by
That the Grand Committee do consider the Misuse of
Drugs Act 1971 (Amendment) Order 2022.
The Minister of State, Home Office () (Con)
My Lords, I thank the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs for its
advice, which has helped to inform the order for consideration
today. The advice, published on 20 November 2020, recommended
that three drugs be moved from class C to class B of
the Misuse of Drugs Act
1971. The drugs are gamma-Hydroxybutyric acid, which is known as
GHB; gamma-Butyrolactone, which is known as GBL; and
1,4-Butanediol, which is known as 1,4-BD. I will refer to them
collectively as GHB and related substances, or GHBRS.
The Advisory Council on the Misuse of
Drugs recommended that all three substances be controlled
under class B of the Misuse of Drugs Act
1971 because of their potential harm and the evidence of the
prevalence of these drugs in the UK. GHBRS are central nervous
system depressants. They have been used as recreational drugs,
but they have also been weaponised to commit drug-facilitated
sexual assault and other crimes. Although a misnomer, they are
commonly referred to as date-rape drugs.
The Advisory Council on the Misuse of
Drugs provided wide-ranging advice on these substances.
Prevalence of use increased steadily from 2005 to 2015 and has
plateaued since 2015. Gamma-Butyrolactone and 1,4-Butanediol are
converted to gamma-Hydroxybutyric acid on ingestion and are
therefore similar in effect. There is evidence of an increasing
number of deaths associated with GHBRS since the ACMD last
considered the harms, including 27 recorded deaths in 2018. It
was found that GHBRS can cause profound unconsciousness and that
there is a high risk to users of overdose and death. Other severe
effects include loss of emotional control, depression, paranoia,
anxiety, aggression, and persistent cognitive impairment. There
is also very strong evidence of GHBRS being used to facilitate
crime, including in high-profile cases. They were used by the
serial rapist Reynhard Sinaga, and the murderers Stephen Port and
Gerald Matovu, to incapacitate their victims.
Clearly, it is right that we follow the advice of independent
experts and tighten control on these substances. Moving them to
class B will increase the maximum penalty for unlawful possession
from two years’ imprisonment or a fine, or both, to five years’
imprisonment or a fine, or both. This will signal to the public
that offences involving these substances are treated seriously
and subject to the appropriate penalties, acting as a deterrent
for their possession and supply. It will ensure that sufficient
punitive measures are available to the courts and will mean that
the police place a higher priority on action against offences
involving these substances.
6.00pm
The report of the Advisory Council on the Misuse of
Drugs recommended not only the control of these drugs under
class B of the Misuse of Drugs Act
1971 but that gamma-Butyrolactone and 1,4-Butanediol be placed in
Schedule 1 to the Misuse of
Drugs Regulations 2001. This is the most restrictive
schedule, which is applied to substances without recognised
therapeutic benefit in the UK.
Currently, GBL and 1,4-BD have a unique status. Although they
have no therapeutic use, it is lawful to import, export, produce,
supply or possess them in circumstances where they are not
intended to be used for human ingestion. This exceptional status
was intended to enable the legitimate industrial use of these
substances. However, the exemption has been exploited to enable
illicit supply. The Misuse of
Drugs (Amendment) (England, Wales and Scotland) Regulations
2021, also laid on 15 December, will therefore abolish the
exemption for GBL and 1,4-BD, meaning that industrial users will
need to obtain a Home Office controlled drugs licence. The 2021
regulations are subject to the negative resolution procedure, so
the rescheduling of GBL and 1,4-BD is not under debate, but it is
a crucial part of the package. Taken together, the two measures
will deter illicit possession and supply, and reduce the
availability of GHBRS, thereby preventing crime.
We all know the destructive effect that illegal drugs have on the
lives not only of those who take them but of their families and
wider society. This is demonstrably the case for GHBRS, which
have been weaponised to enable crime. The advice from independent
experts makes it clear that these substances are harmful. It
follows that they must be subject to stricter controls. I commend
the order to the Committee.
(LD)
My Lords, I should remind the Committee that a former partner of
mine died from an accidental overdose of GHB.
I thank the Minister for introducing this order. I must admit to
being in something of a quandary about how to approach it. On the
one hand, I do not believe that reclassification of these drugs
to class B is enough. On the other hand, the classification of
drugs is largely irrelevant.
I have said before that the classification of drugs under
the Misuse of Drugs Act has
very little credibility among those for whom it is most
important—those who use controlled drugs. I do not know of
anyone, particularly young people, who consider what class a drug
is in before deciding whether to take drugs or what drugs to take
before going on a night out, for example. Similarly, those
addicted to controlled drugs pay no attention to the
classification under the Misuse of Drugs Act.
The reclassification of GHB and associated compounds from class C
to class B, as the Minister has explained, further undermines the
credibility of the system of classification, as it places GHB in
the same class as cannabis. GHB is used to facilitate rape and to
commit murder; it can result in sudden accidental death; and it
is being moved into the same class as cannabis.
GHB is a colourless, odourless liquid that can easily be mixed
unknowingly into someone’s drink, for example. It can and has
been used, as the Minister said, as a so-called date-rape drug
because, as the impact assessment shows, it can cause drowsiness
and amnesia and the victim to slip into and out of
unconsciousness. It is also rapidly eliminated from the body,
making it very difficult to definitively identify in criminal
cases.
But it is worse than that. Taken in small quantities over a
period of time, it may not cause critical short-term effects but,
over a long period, it can cause mental and social health harms.
People can easily become psychologically addicted. GHB is one of
the few drugs from which people can die while trying to withdraw
from taking it. It is very easy to overdose, as my former partner
found out.
Michael apparently took some GHB before going to a party.
Forgetting he had already taken some, he took another dose on
arrival, realised his mistake and made himself sick to get the
second dose out of his system. He was allowed to fall asleep and
began to snore. At that point in the evidence, which was being
given by the host of the party at the inquest into Michael’s
death, the coroner interrupted and said that snoring was a sign
of the respiratory system shutting down and, for future
reference, was the time to call an ambulance. Michael had not
been breathing for about an hour before, the hosts say, they
realised and called an ambulance. I was holding Michael’s
mother’s hand as we listened to the evidence at the inquest.
GHB is widely used in connection with so-called chemsex, where
parties are held and drugs are consumed to overcome inhibitions
that some have to such an extent that they cannot have sex
without these drugs. GHB is often taken in combination with other
drugs such as crystal meth, making it increasingly difficult for
some to keep track of how much GHB they have actually taken. As I
have described, it is very easy to go from conscious to
unconscious to respiratory failure to death, whether accidentally
or when GHB is weaponised by sexual predators.
Noble Lords will recall Stephen Port, who was convicted of
murdering four young men by administering GHB. In terms of risk
to life, if ever any drug should be classified as class A, this
is it. My understanding is that, in addition to reclassification,
the Advisory Council on the Misuse of
Drugs advised the Home Office that a public information
campaign was necessary to raise awareness of the dangers these
drugs pose, as well as better data collection, such as compulsory
testing for GHB in post-mortems where death is unexplained, and
increased support and rehabilitation for users and those
addicted. In addressing the London Assembly this morning, the
Metropolitan Police Commissioner talked about Stephen Port and
how, in all cases of sexual assault, they now conduct tests for
GHB, even when no complaint is made. I would welcome any
information the Minister has about whether that will be extended
to post-mortems.
Can the Minister also explain what other measures the Home Office
is taking to address—to quote the ACMD—
“strong new evidence of significant harm due to the criminal use
of GHBRS, including murder, drug-facilitated sexual assault … and
robbery … a marked increase in deaths … physical, mental and
social health harms”?
Reclassifying GHB as a class B drug and updating the information
on FRANK is simply not good enough.
The reclassification of cannabis from class C to class B was
ineffective in terms of harm and use reduction. GHB is
characterised here as being only as dangerous as cannabis. It was
only when there was publicity about the health dangers of
prolonged, excessive use of genetically modified cannabis, the
potential to trigger schizophrenia in those with a propensity to
it and the harm to the developing brains of young people that
cannabis use declined. Education, not criminalisation, caused
that reduction in use.
We have seen people who have fallen unconscious from taking GHB
being dragged from dancefloors on to the streets to save
nightclub operators’ licences. We have seen people hesitate to
call ambulances or otherwise seek medical help for fear of being
prosecuted for illegal possession of drugs. Criminalisation of
drug misuse costs lives. Education on the effects of these
substances is where the emphasis should be, not on rearranging
the deckchairs on the “Titanic” war on drugs.
If GHB is to be illegal and is to be reclassified, it should be a
class A drug. To classify it as equivalent to cannabis is quite
obviously ridiculous—but the most important step is a public
information campaign to ensure that people are aware of how
dangerous GHB and related substances are, despite it being
classified by this order only as class B.
(Lab)
We support the amendments to the Misuse of
Drugs Act 1971 and thank the Minister for introducing so
comprehensively the details of the changes proposed. Just to
remind the Committee, I sit as a magistrate and regularly deal
with drug-related matters in all the jurisdictions—in youth,
family and adult criminal matters. It is normal for me, when
dealing with these matters, to notice that the street names of
drugs change, the names recorded on the charge sheets change, and
the strengths of the drugs that we are dealing with change as
well. It is a moving picture; I understand the purpose of this
amendment, but I take the point made by the noble Lord, , that in a sense the system is
always playing catch-up with what is happening with illegal drug
use.
I thought it might be interesting for the Committee if I told an
anecdote about when I was sitting as a magistrate in Horseferry
Road about 10 years ago. We were in a regular criminal court and
we had a young man in front of us—he was an adult in his early
20s. He had his father in court, and a privately paid lawyer, and
he was pleading guilty to possession of a class B drug. That drug
had only recently been made illegal; it had previously been a
legal drug, and he had become addicted to it. He had dropped out
of college and been put on a rehabilitation programme. He was
doing better—but he had been picked up in possession of the drug,
and that was the matter that he was pleading guilty to.
What nobody else in the court knew except me was that our legal
adviser, before she became a legal adviser, was a nurse. She
googled the drug referred to and asked us to retire. She told us
that the drug that he had been found in possession of was a
date-rape drug, which we had been told he was addicted to. In
fact, we had had it presented to us that he was a victim in
unfortunate circumstances. So we had to decide how to proceed,
given that potentially, given the information that we had been
given, it was a much more serious matter than simple possession
of a drug.
In the end, we sentenced the man for simple possession, but we
got the legal adviser to go and tell the young man’s lawyer—not
his father—that we knew what that drug could be used for. When we
went back into court and sentenced him—and he would only have got
a fine, or something—we made it very clear that there can be
other connotations for people having these drugs, and things can
get much more serious. In fact, the legal adviser suggested that
we might send the matter up to Crown Court, although we did not
do that in the end.
I support these amendments. I know that there are limitations
with what is happening, and I understand the points that the
noble Lord, , made—and I agree with his
points about education being better than criminalisation,
although I part company with him on a number of other aspects of
legalisation of certain types of drugs. Nevertheless, I welcome
these amendments to the drugs Act.
6.15pm
(Con)
I thank both noble Lords for their very constructive points
during this debate. The case example that the noble Lord, Lord
Ponsonby, gave was very pertinent to how we might approach drug
use in society: seeing someone as a user but also as a potential
victim. The noble Lord, , may have told me before his
moving story about the tragic consequences of using a drug that,
as he said, is not only hard to detect once taken but very
difficult to detect post-mortem because of how quickly it clears
from the body. If someone is in a slightly confused state, having
taken it and forgotten that they have taken it, the danger is
compounded. I thank them both very much for those stories. On
what further work will be done on post-mortem, which in itself is
a difficult thing to determine, I will get more information if I
can, but we recognise the difficulty of detecting post-mortem. I
assume that people whose intent is criminal exploit those
difficulties.
As I said earlier, the ACMD recommended that GHBRS be moved from
class C to class B. We hope that reclassification will benefit
the public by reflecting our new understanding of the harms of
those drugs. Increased penalties for offences under
the Misuse of Drugs Act,
coupled with the effect of the regulation in restricting supply,
are expected to deter and prevent crime, but I take the points of
both noble Lords about education. The Government’s drugs strategy
is not a simple one of legislation; it is about support,
education and moving “from harm to hope”, as the long-term
strategy on drugs we have in place is called. That symbolises
what the Government are trying to do.
On investment—putting our money where our mouth is—we are
investing another £780 million to rebuild drug treatment and
recovery services, including for young people and offenders, with
new commissioning standards to drive transparency and
consistency. Strengthening the evidence base for how best to
deter use, ensuring that adults change their behaviour, alongside
targeted activity to prevent young people from getting into this
lifestyle in the first place, is really important.
The noble Lord, , said that young people do not
pay attention to classification—I totally agree—so how would
reclassification meet our ambition in the drugs strategy? We need
to take a better approach; I think we have all recognised that.
No matter who you are and where you use, you should be encouraged
to change your behaviour and to face consequences if you do not.
We all know that recreational drug use fuels criminal
markets—they thrive on it—which has a terrible impact on those
involved in supply and the communities in which it takes
place.
The noble Lord also asked me about treatment available to support
users of GHB. As I said earlier, there is now significant
investment in treatment, which will mean that everyone who needs
help with their drug use will be able to get it. Substance misuse
commissioners and sexual health commissioners will be supported
to work together to improve pathways between services for those
who use drugs in a chemsex context, where GHB is of course
frequently used, and local authorities will continue to play
their role here.
On challenging the Government’s approach to drugs, we are clear
that it is anchored in education and effective consequences to
reduce demand, tough and intelligent enforcement to restrict
supply, and evidence-based treatment to aid recovery and
co-ordinated global action. As we know, the problem is a global
one.
On discriminatory effects and the groups that are
disproportionately affected by tougher penalties, I refer now to
the MSM community. The ACMD says in its report that men who have
sex with men are the largest user group of GHBRS—I do not think
that is disputed. They are often taken in the context of chemsex.
The changes in classification and scheduling will
disproportionately impact this group. However, the potential
benefits of reducing the prevalence and the harms from GHBRS will
also benefit the group.
As both noble Lords have said, legislative changes in and of
themselves will not act in isolation. We expect to respond
shortly to the ACMD’s educational and treatment-based
recommendations, which will be delivered by the Office for Health
Improvement and Disparities. We hope that this will help to
counteract any unintended impact of the reclassification of
GHBRS.
I hope that I have answered both noble Lords’ questions. I am
sure that if I have not, they will intervene on me. If there are
no further points, I commend the regulation to the Committee.
(LD)
I thank the Minister for her comprehensive explanation. I was not
suggesting at all that it would be wrong if this change had a
disproportionate impact on a particular section of society. My
main concern is that, to me, with the knowledge that I have of
controlled drugs and the way they are used, I cannot think of
anything more dangerous in terms of risk to life than GHB and the
related substances. Perhaps the ACMD felt that it could not do
two steps at once—in other words, it could not go from class C to
Class A, because that might undermine its previous assessment of
the drug. As I explained, I understand that the long-term effects
of cannabis can be quite damaging to people’s mental health, but
there is not the same danger of cannabis being weaponised to
commit sexual offences, for it to be used as a murder weapon, as
it was in the Stephen Port case, or as an overdose resulting in
immediate and sudden death. Yet it is being reclassified as the
same class as cannabis when it appears to me, from my experience,
to be far more dangerous than cannabis. Does the noble Baroness
have anything to say on that point?
(Con)
I did not for a moment think that the noble Lord was objecting to
the disproportionate effect on certain groups. When the ACMD
considers things, it considers them very carefully and keeps them
under review. I have tried to outline concern today about the
stigma caused by increasing the classification on those who use
the drugs, but also the desire to help people with the terrible
problems that these drugs can cause. I am sure that it will keep
it under review, and the noble Lord may well be right: it may
recommend further classification in due course.
Motion agreed.
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