Tag: marijuana prosecutions

  • Thousands Of Marijuana Convictions Automatically Expunged In New York

    Thousands Of Marijuana Convictions Automatically Expunged In New York

    Around 24,000 New Yorkers will have their records cleared by a new marijuana decriminalization law.

    Tens of thousands of people in New York state will have their low-level marijuana offenses expunged under a marijuana decriminalization law that took effect on Wednesday (Aug. 27).

    The law was the consolation prize for marijuana reformers after the state failed to pass cannabis legalization this year. Under the new law, possessing less than 2 ounces of marijuana is a violation punishable by a fine of $200 or less. Prior to this, it was a misdemeanor offense. 

    How It Works

    As part of the new law, New Yorkers will automatically have low-level marijuana offenses expunged from their records, although the process could take up to a year, according to The New York Times.  

    The State Division of Criminal Justice Services estimated that about 24,000 people across New York will have their records cleared because of the new law, but the Drug Policy Alliance says that the number is likely to be much higher, since nearly 900,000 New Yorkers have been arrested for low-level marijuana offenses since 1990. 

    Racial Disparity

    The automatic expunging of records has been praised by many people who point out that marijuana prosecutions disproportionately affect people of color. 

    “For too long communities of color have been disproportionately impacted by laws governing marijuana and have suffered the lifelong consequences of an unfair marijuana conviction,” New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said in a statement.

    Having a clean record “gives people a new lease on life, removing the suffocating stain of stigma that prevents so many from reaching their highest potential,” said Khalil A. Cumberbatch, a social justice reform advocate who was pardoned by Cuomo in 2014 and now works as the chief strategist at New Yorkers United for Justice.

    One of the bill’s co-sponsors, state senator Zellnor Myrie of Brooklyn, said that clearing records and decriminalizing marijuana is an important first step to correcting the damages done by the war on drugs. 

    “I represent Brownsville; that was ground zero for a lot of this,” he said. “[This] is just the beginning of the state recognizing the errors of that war.”

    Even those who are not in favor of marijuana legalization applauded the measure. Kevin Sabet, director of Smart Approaches to Marijuana, an advocacy group that opposes legalization, said that marijuana use should be seen in a similar fashion to speeding. 

    “It’s something discouraged, but it’s not something that is going to destroy your life if you’re caught doing it,” he said. 

    He continued, “We don’t want people in prison for marijuana use, but the criminal sanctions on marijuana is not a reason to commercialize and normalize marijuana.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Hemp Confusion Forces Miami & Other Counties To Halt Minor Marijuana Arrests

    Hemp Confusion Forces Miami & Other Counties To Halt Minor Marijuana Arrests

    Police will be required to submit marijuana to state labs for testing in cases that would warrant felony charges.

    A new Florida law that legalized hemp has spurred police and prosecutors in Miami-Dade and other counties in the Sunshine State to halt arrests and cases for minor marijuana possession.

    The Miami-Dade State Attorney’s office announced the decision on August 9, 2019, and added that police will be required to submit marijuana to state labs for testing in cases that would warrant felony charges.

    The county’s new position echoes similar stances take throughout Florida, and as the Miami Herald noted, highlights the challenges faced by law enforcement and lawyers in a state where both hemp and medical marijuana are legal, but recreational marijuana use remains a prosecutable offense.

    Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle outlined the county’s new measures in a three-page memo sent to its police departments, which put a halt on marijuana prosecutions in Miami, as the city’s CBS TV affiliate, WFOR, noted in its coverage.

    Hemp VS Marijuana

    “Since hemp and cannabis both come from the same plant, they look, smell and feel the same,” wrote Rundle in her memo. “There is no way to visually or microscopically distinguish hemp from marijuana.”

    Rundle’s comments address the “odor plus” policy that some police departments employ as a go-ahead for officers to conduct probable cause searches on potential possession suspects. It also underscores another major hurdle for South Florida police: currently, none of the region’s police crime labs are equipped to test for THC, which will require law enforcement to submit cannabis samples to “another DEA-licensed facility for quantitative testing,” as Rundle wrote in the memo.

    Faced with the twin roadblocks, Rundle advised law enforcement agencies, “Since every marijuana case will now require an expert, and necessitate a significant expenditure by the State of Florida, barring exceptional circumstance on a particular case, we will not be prosecuting misdemeanor marijuana possession cases.”

    For many counties and cities in South Florida, this was already the case. As the Miami Herald noted, Miami-Dade and several other cities stopped aggressive prosecution of possession cases several years ago, and have instead implemented “civil citation” programs which levies a fine for minor possession charges.

    Even cases that have been spawned from arrests have been dropped in Miami-Dade if the defendant did not generate any additional charges for a period of at least 60 days.

    Additional counties and cities, including Seminole and Brevard counties and the city of Tallahassee, have adopted similar positions in regard to minor possession charges, and State Rep. Shevrin Jones (D-West Park) hopes to make that stance a statewide law.

    The Miami Herald detailed a proposal filed by his office on August 7 that would reduce penalties for possession charges involving 20 grams or less of cannabis and products that contain 600 mg or less of THC.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Hemp Legalization Complicates Marijuana Prosecutions In Texas

    Hemp Legalization Complicates Marijuana Prosecutions In Texas

    There are only two accredited labs in the state that can determine the difference between hemp and marijuana.

    As more states legalize hemp, prosecutors are dropping marijuana-related cases because of difficulties distinguishing it from marijuana

    “Everybody is struggling with this,” Peter Stout told The New York Times. Stout is the president of the Houston Forensic Science Center, a lab that does analysis for law enforcement agencies including the Houston Police Department. 

    What Is The Difference?

    Hemp and marijuana are different strains of the cannabis sativa plant. Under federal law, hemp was legalized as part of the 2018 Farm Bill. The bill described hemp as a cannabis plant containing less than 0.3% THC, the active ingredient in marijuana that gets people high. Many state laws align with this definition. 

    While that distinction is clear legislatively, it remains difficult to determine the difference between marijuana and hemp both by physical appearance and in court. 

    “It’s not different at all,” Bob Gualtieri, sheriff in Florida’s Pinellas County, told the Tampa Bay Times. “I wish it was pink. That would make it easier.”

    In Texas, many prosecutors have dropped or declined to prosecute cases involving marijuana because there are only two labs that are accredited with the state that can determine the difference between marijuana and hemp. Prosecutors who cover Houston, Austin and San Antonio have all stopped pursuing cannabis crimes. 

    Republican lawmakers in Texas recently sent a letter to prosecutors, chastising them for dropping cannabis cases. 

    Understanding The Law

    “Some of you have recently dismissed marijuana possession cases or announced you will not prosecute misdemeanor marijuana possession cases without a lab test,” the letter reads. “Marijuana has not been decriminalized in Texas, and these actions demonstrate a misunderstanding of how H.B. 1325 works.”

    The letter goes on to say that lab tests are not required to prove that a substance is marijuana, not hemp. 

    “Failing to enforce marijuana laws cannot be blamed on legislation that did not decriminalize marijuana in Texas,” the letter reads. 

    However, Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg said that lab testing “has long been required” to prosecute marijuana cases. 

    Texas lawyer Brandon Ball agreed. “The law is constantly changing on what makes something illegal, based on its chemical makeup,” he said. “It’s important that if someone is charged with something, the test matches what they’re charged with.”

    Even the Drug Enforcement Administration has trouble distinguishing between hemp and marijuana. Earlier this year, the agency put out a call for a device that could properly identify the substance out in the field.

    Seeing a business opportunity, companies are scrambling to make a fast and affordable test to distinguish between the two. Syndicate Alliance is one company in the process of creating a field test kit for determining whether a substance is marijuana or hemp. John Waldheim, COO and co-founder of the company, said that he expects to distribute 30,000 kits before the end of the summer. 

    He said, “It’s like an overnight sensation.”

    View the original article at thefix.com