More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Jesse Levine

Jesse Levine

Posted: October 27, 2010 05:45 PM

On September 30, one month before California votes to make recreational use of marijuana legal for adults, Governor Schwarzenegger signed Senate Bill 1449 into law. The new law downgrades the possession of an ounce or less marijuana from a misdemeanor to an infraction.

This development was rightfully applauded by the marijuana law reformers who had worked hard for its passage. But if Prop 19 -- the initiative to legalize marijuana in California -- fails, the infraction law may not be as big a victory as it seems. Supporters of Prop. 19 should not stay away from the polls on November 2 because they think the problem has been solved.

Every news story about the new law has repeated Gov. Schwarzenegger's claim that now punishment for marijuana possession is no different than for a traffic ticket. The Associated Press wrote that, "a new law makes possessing up to an ounce of marijuana in California no more serious than getting a speeding ticket." Associated Content reported the law will "reduce criminal charges from a misdemeanor to the mere status of a parking ticket -- with a $100 fine." Time Magazine's news feed wrote jokingly, "If you get caught with up to an ounce of marijuana you'll be in big trouble. In fact, you can get fined as much as $100. No kidding!" Those comments miss the mark; the $100 fine may be just the tip of a very big iceberg.

Drug possession convictions are far more harmful than parking tickets -- even if the charge is a "mere infraction". In New York City, where I work as a field researcher for the Marijuana Arrest Research Project, the indirect, or "collateral consequences" of two tickets for marijuana can be dramatic. Guilty pleas to two marijuana possession offenses make an immigrant deportable, a public housing resident subject to eviction, and a college student ineligible for financial aid. Children can even be removed from mothers because of a positive marijuana drug test. New civil penalties for petty drug offenses -- which bar people from job licenses and housing subsidies -- are passed regularly by many politicians who view the penalties as an inexpensive way to establish their law and order credentials.

The availability of criminal records makes it almost impossible for law enforcement to impose minor punishments, slaps on the wrists, or warnings. Today, for a relatively small fee or even for no fee at all, employers, landlords, credit agencies and schools routinely conduct criminal background checks on any and all applicants. The stigma of a criminal record has already created huge barriers to employment and education for hundreds of thousands of Californians.

These marijuana possession arrests and their consequences are not evenly or fairly distributed among the population. Police departments almost everywhere concentrate their patrols and stop in low-income neighborhoods, which are also disproportionately black and Latino neighborhoods. As a result young blacks and Latinos, who use marijuana at lower rates than young whites, are disproportionately stopped, searched and arrested for possessing a small amount of marijuana. These same young people are the most adversely effected by criminal records and civil penalties.

Studies by the Marijuana Arrest Research Project have demonstrated that these racially-skewed or biased marijuana arrests are going on in cities and counties throughout California. For example, police in Los Angeles arrest blacks for marijuana possession at seven times the rate of whites. In Pasadena police arrest blacks at over twelve times the rate of whites. These statistics have moved the president of the California NAACP to call marijuana law reform a civil rights issue. This racially biased and discriminatory enforcement is firmly entrenched.

Changing misdemeanors to infractions will not address, nor is meant to address, these trends in policing. Infraction tickets will be given out to the same young people who are disproportionately arrested. People who failed to pay a fine on a previous infraction can be arrested, fingerprinted and charged with a misdemeanor. The suspicion of marijuana use will still empower the police to stop and question many more people. People stopped by the police who do not have proper identification can be handcuffed and brought to the precinct to check fingerprints. Police stops also result in plenty of arrests where "disorderly conduct" or "resisting arrest" is the only charge. As a field researcher, I speak to arrestees and defense attorneys and constantly hear the stories of pointless arrests.

As long as marijuana is illegal, California law enforcement will use possession of marijuana to bring mostly low-income blacks and Latino's into the criminal justice system. On the other hand, legalization of marijuana possession would be a major victory for civil rights in America.

 
On September 30, one month before California votes to make recreational use of marijuana legal for adults, Governor Schwarzenegger signed Senate Bill 1449 into law. The new law downgrades the possess...
On September 30, one month before California votes to make recreational use of marijuana legal for adults, Governor Schwarzenegger signed Senate Bill 1449 into law. The new law downgrades the possess...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 84
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3  Next ›  Last »  (3 total)
photo
Kelly L White
An American Ex-Pat- Pagan.
02:15 AM on 10/31/2010
Thank you for reminding people of how all encompassing the evils of prohibition are! It's not about marijuana, it's about freedom. I and countless others say that and mean it, but too few are aware of how many freedoms are lost in this mess. Thanks for writing this.
photo
iuriggs6
Sure thing. Shoot, Timmy.
12:56 PM on 10/28/2010
If you don't want the stigma of a criminal record then don't break the law. It's that simple...
02:43 PM on 10/28/2010
You are missing the point and, of course, it sounds like intentionally. The point is that it's a bad law and the discussion is that it needs to change. If we fail to stand up against bad laws, we fail to do our jobs as citizens.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
fumes
midnight toker
11:34 AM on 10/28/2010
just say like duh..
11:20 AM on 10/28/2010
The Audacity of Dope.

This campaign needs a tag line.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
fumes
midnight toker
11:56 AM on 10/28/2010
how about..

''Victory for Multiple Sclerosis Sufferers''
01:54 PM on 10/28/2010
I did not mean to diminish the importance of this issue to those who willl benefit from it. I personally don't have a problem with the legalization of marijuana. I was just trying to be ironic.

Disclaimer. I did Google the phrase after the fact and found that this tag line has already been used by others.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dynamohum
02:23 PM on 10/28/2010
Cancer sufferers and those with HIV/AIDS.
02:10 PM on 10/28/2010
I thought "Yes We Cannabis" was pretty good.
photo
sve
Behave youselves!
11:11 AM on 10/28/2010
So my in-law's son just graduated from four years of college. He finally decides to pursue his life interest in law enforcement and maybe go into FBI or CIA eventually. He applies to be a police officer in his home state. Scores in the top 2% of applicants. He's happy to be starting his adult life with a job in his chosen career.

Then he gets a notice that he is disqualified because of a prior drug offense. Seems he was in a car with four friends in high school that was pulled over. Pot was found in the car. All four were cited. It's decriminalized there so there's no public record of the charge. You pay your fine and leave. There's no record unless you're law enforcement. They get to see everything. His chosen career is beyond his reach now.

Until pot is legal, the justice system will continue to destroy lives the laws were never intended for.
12:52 PM on 10/28/2010
Keep trying, perhaps with another agency. As long as he was upfront with the incident -- telling them about it before they found out, the cite is generally not automatic disqualification, at least with municipal depts and sheriff depts. They are looking for a pattern of behavior and honesty.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Jesse Levine
07:33 PM on 10/28/2010
Hi Sve, I'm the one who wrote this article. Your story is a near perfect example of the kinds of life altering consequences that can come from a minor marijuana infraction. What happened to your relative also shows how criminal records which are supposedly not in the system can still be accessed and used against people.

Tell your in law that not all Police Departments still exclude people for minor marijuana offenses from when they were younger. The Los Angeles Police Department and some other California Police Departments no longer exclude people for marijuana possession records. Unfortunately, most police departments still do. This is exactly why we need to end marijuana prohibition and the life damaging effects of criminal records.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Snarkyone
10:46 AM on 10/28/2010
End prohibition of marijuana and start one on politicians and bankers.
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
MikeDu
Both salubrious and lugubrious concurrently.
10:09 AM on 10/28/2010
It a bad bad bad idea to turn California into a narco-state just to get tax money from the vice. When you vote vote NO.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
fumes
midnight toker
10:13 AM on 10/28/2010
ru scared?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fredday
Nyak Nyak Nyak
12:31 PM on 10/28/2010
Happily voted YES.
02:10 PM on 10/28/2010
Thank you!
photo
john frodo
armchair expert
10:05 AM on 10/28/2010
I am outraged that more celebrities especially from the business world are not coming out to help the vote.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
omeo2013
Jesus says we should cut taxes for millionaires.
09:02 AM on 10/28/2010
I thought the whole point of decriminalizing it was that people would no longer have a criminal record. I'm glad the penalties have been greatly reduced, but the criminal record is the part that does the most damage.

GET OUT AND VOTE, CALIFORNIA! DON'T LET HOLDER SCARE YOU!

www.omeo2013.wordpress.com
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
08:58 AM on 10/28/2010
Why should there be any "punishment" at all for an adult who prefers to responsibly use a non-toxic plant that's less harmful than alcohol or tobacco? I can't think of one other area of commerce where the less harmful product is banned.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Red Ohio
10:22 AM on 10/28/2010
Cocaine.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
10:55 AM on 10/28/2010
In what other area of commerce? Marijuana and Cocaine are in the drug area of commerce.
10:37 AM on 10/28/2010
Tryptophan. One bad manufacturer and they take it off the market completely. But you can still get Vioxx.......
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
10:56 AM on 10/28/2010
In what other area of commerce? Marijuana, Tryptophan and Vioxx are in the drug area of commerce
photo
Cory111
Life is good...
08:33 AM on 10/28/2010
You ask any person coming out of a bar at 2 a.m. that is looking for their car what they think about pot. They will try and tell you probably in a rather halting manner it's going to destroy our youth.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Snarkyone
10:47 AM on 10/28/2010
Or ask if you have some.
06:16 AM on 10/28/2010
disorderly conduct? when did we elect cops to become keepers of all things moral? when they can't find pot, you aren't drunk, and are merely speaking your mind they can decide that your conduct is unacceptable. i'd like to see a list of what is not acceptable and how that is decided.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
lodger16x
02:58 AM on 10/28/2010
When I was just an 18-yr old college student in 1978 in a small liberal arts college in Memphis, we didn't have internet, so I wandered around the library stacks browsing through books. I came across one by a sociologist who said American society approves alcohol because it makes you dumb, and America is scared of weed and other drugs that kinda make you think. Well, 30 years later , we still got us plenty of alcohol, 10's of millions of people who never learned to think, and weed is still scary to most people. The result- a minority Prez who loves him some Wall St, and a Tea Party that thinks he doesn't love him some Wall St enough! HA!
photo
artleads
Let's have a national retreat.
11:14 PM on 10/27/2010
As posited on HP yesterday, pot legalization is the nation's most pressing voting issue. I SURE hope all supporters get out there and VOTE!
10:53 PM on 10/27/2010
Just got back from college midterms. Guess all of us stoners aren't lazy.
Currently carrying a 3.84 average over 70 semester hours. Guess we're not stupid.
Start the nursing program next fall. Guess some of us have ambition.
I'll be 53 when I become registered to help others in need. My third career.
Guess using cannabis isn't so bad.
12:05 AM on 10/28/2010
Stavros,
Where're going to work as a RN. Health care careers mean dropping a pee test. Bravo on the third career, just learn to pass a drug screen too.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dynamohum
02:33 PM on 10/28/2010
I got straight A's in my college Computer Information Systems course work and all while you know what.