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Tuesday, April 22,
2008
The first federal
marijuana decriminalization bill in 25 years was just introduced in
Congress. Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA) and Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX) introduced
H.R. 5843, the “Personal Use of Marijuana by Responsible Adults Act of
2008,” which would decriminalize possession of marijuana for personal
use.
A deluge of messages
from constituents will help members of Congress feel more confident in
declaring their support for the bill. We don't expect the bill to become
law just yet, but it will help us find out which members of Congress
support marijuana decriminalization and which do not. The more
representatives who co-sponsor it, the more support we can show for
marijuana law reform.
Last year alone the
police made almost 830,000 arrests for marijuana law offenses in the
United States. 89 percent of those arrests were for posssession for
personal use. Those arrested were seperated from their families, branded
criminals, and in many cases fired from their jobs and denied school
loans and other public assistance. The arrests cost taxpayers billions
of dollars and consumed an estimated 4.5 million law enforcment hours
(that’s the equivalent of taking 112,500 law enforcement officers off
the streets).
H.R. 5843 would make
it legal under federal law for adults to possess up to 100 grams (3.5
ounces) of marijuana for personal use. It would also allow
not-for-profit transfers of up to one ounce of marijuana between
consenting adults.
Our executive
director, Ethan Nadelmann, made a powerful case for ending marijuana
prohibition in a 2004 cover story in National Review
More
Information
--In 1972 a special
commission formed by Congress and President Richard Nixon concluded that
punitive marijuana laws do more harm than good. Among other things, the
National Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse urged states and the
federal government to decriminalize the possession of small amounts of
marijuana for personal use. Twelve states eventually did, but most
states and the federal government ignored the report.
--Since 1972 twelve
states have decriminalized the possession of small amounts of marijuana
for personal use: Alaska, California, Colorado, Maine, Minnesota,
Mississippi, Nebraska, Nevada, New York, Ohio, and Oregon.
Decriminalization generally means people caught possessing marijuana for
personal use are not subjected to imprisonment for at least their first
offense, although they may be subject to a small fine.
--A 2001 Zogby poll
found that 61 percent of Americans oppose arresting and jailing
nonviolent marijuana smokers. A 2002 Time/CNN poll found that 72 percent
of Americans think people arrested for marijuana possession should face
fines and not jail time.
--A study that
examined arrest statistics for smoking or possessing marijuana in public
in New York City from 1980 through 2006 found that blacks were four
times as likely as whites to receive jail time for possession of
marijuana. Hispanics were three times as likely. In 2002 about 2.4
percent of all marijuana users were arrested for marijuana possession.
The arrest rate for blacks was 94 percent higher. |