Go directly to the menu Site plan
  • Normal
  • Medium
  • Large

Les Archives de Radio-Canada

Home · Arts & Entertainment · Music · Keith Richards' heroin bust

Keith Richards' heroin bust

Broadcast Date: Oct. 24, 1978

A Toronto courtroom is filled to the rafters today with Rolling Stones fans eager to observe the fate of Keith Richards. Richards was busted for heroin possession after igniting suspicion by spending a few hours too many in an airplane washroom. But since he's not likely to steal for his habit, which is the court's main concern with heroin charges, his punishment is light. The guitarist is ordered to perform a charity concert for the Canadian National Institute for the Blind.

Keith Richards' heroin bust

• Critics were quick to say Richards received special treatment after his drug bust. In the House of Commons, former prime minister John Diefenbaker called the sentence "preposterous and more than lenient." But Health and Welfare statistics showed that Richards's sentence was average. In the previous year, about half of Canadian heroin convictions were also jail-free.

• Born on Dec. 18, 1943 in Dartford, England, Richards is a founding member and principal guitarist of the Rolling Stones.
• Richards reportedly quit heroin after this incident and has credited Toronto with saving his life. On his Web site, Richards says "I have lived my life in my own way, and I am here because I've taken the trouble to find out who I am."

• In "Rock's 50 Greatest Meltdowns," Rolling Stone magazine reported that Richards was caught with 22 grams of heroin and five grams of cocaine. And that he requested some drugs back from the police until he could find a new supply.
• For the charity concert, Richards formed the band The New Barbarians, with Ron Wood, Stanley Clarke, Ian McLagan and saxophonist Bobby Keys.

Keith Richards' heroin bust

Medium: Television

Program: The National

Broadcast Date: Oct. 24, 1978


Reporter: David Bazay

Duration: 1:31

Last updated:
Feb. 7, 2012


End of list




Discover also
Punk Rock Comes to Canada
Topic
In 1977, a new form of underground music emerged from Canadian basements and garages. Journalists called it punk rock. It was kids with boot polish in their hair, playing out-of-tune guitars and questioning...
Pot and Politics: Canada and the Marijuana Debate
Topic
In 1923 it became illegal for Canadians to possess marijuana. But the laws have always been flouted, by recreational users who just want to get high, and by medicinal users seeking relief from pain and illness...
hyperlien

External sites

Ne pas deleter...fix IE6