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Galileo Galilei
07-29-2008, 04:30 PM
20 Years for Pot Possession?

by Paul Armentano

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According to an investigative report by the New Orleans City Business newspaper, Orleans Parish District Attorney Keva Landrum-Johnson is routinely seeking five-to-20 year sentences for minor pot possession offenders.

Smoke Screen

District attorney boosts felony convictions with marijuana cases

via neworleanscitybusiness.com

Shortly after Keva Landrum-Johnson took over as district attorney following Eddie Jordan’s resignation Oct. 30, hundreds of new felony cases flooded the public defenders office, overwhelming the 29 defense attorneys.

The flood of new felony charges didn’t target murderers, rapists or armed robbers – they targeted small-time marijuana users, sometimes caught with less than a gram of pot, and threatened them with lengthy prison sentences.

The resulting impact has clogged the courts with non-violent, petty offenses, drained the resources of the criminal justice system and damaged low-income African-American communities.

… Landrum-Johnson’s decision to accept felony charges on people arrested for second and third marijuana possession offenses is a dramatic break from the tactics of former DAs Jordan and Harry Connick.

A first-time marijuana possession charge in Louisiana is a misdemeanor punishable by up to six months in prison but typically results in a small fine.

A second offense is a felony that can carry up to five years in jail and a third offense up to 20 years.

Under Jordan and Connick, however, second and third offenses were routinely reduced to misdemeanors that typically did not require a trial. This freed up public resources to be spent on violent crimes as opposed to minor, victimless offenses.

Question: Who’s the real "bad guy" here?

The obvious answer is DA Landrum-Johnson, who is throwing the book at minor pot offenders in a cynical effort to appear "tough on crime" and bolster her campaign for Criminal Court Judge.

But the blame should not end with the DA. The true culprits responsible for this mess are the Louisiana lawmakers who, apparently, believe it’s quite alright for minor pot offenders to face up to 20 years in prison and a felony record.

It’s not the responsibility of each individual DA to try and make rational sense out of what is clearly an irrational law. In fact, in an ironic twist, DA Landrum-Johnson’s actions may actually hasten statewide reforms in Louisiana by once and for all exposing the state’s dirty little secret: Louisiana possesses some of the most malevolent pot penalties in the country!

Well, it’s time that we call them on it. Write or call your Louisiana state legislators and ask them if they believe that minor marijuana offenders should face five-to-20 years in prison. And if they don’t, then tell them to sponsor legislation in 2009 to make Louisiana’s absurd pot penalties a thing of the past.

July 29, 2008

Paul Armentano [send him mail] is the senior policy analyst for NORML and the NORML Foundation in Washington, DC. He is the author of "Emerging Clinical Applications for Cannabis and Cannabinoids: A Review of the Scientific Literature" (2007, NORML Foundation).

Copyright © 2008 Paul Armentano

Paul Armentano Archives

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CopThatSupportsRonPaul
07-29-2008, 04:37 PM
That's messed up, up to 20 years for just mere possession of marijuana? There's going to be a lot of teenagers and college students in prison...

Indy Vidual
07-29-2008, 05:00 PM
Nasty... :eek:

Dorfsmith
07-29-2008, 05:04 PM
These people will not be happy until every American is in prison, has a long criminal history or is registered as a sex offender. :mad:

SeanEdwards
07-29-2008, 05:10 PM
That's messed up, up to 20 years for just mere possession of marijuana? There's going to be a lot of teenagers and college students in prison...

I doubt clean cut college kids are the ones being charged. These prosecutions are probably only being brought against ugly people. And we all know ugly people don't deserve freedom.

speciallyblend
07-29-2008, 06:41 PM
wow pretty scarey and hell in colorado you can have up to an ounce and its a 100 dollar fine, if they were smart people ,id get the hell out of the state and move to a better state;)

Bruno
07-29-2008, 08:35 PM
It's such a shame that New Orleans, with all their problems, would spend one million dollars ($50,000/year prison x 20 years) to lock up a person for less than one gram of pot worth at most a few dollars. Lunacy. Much better to keep that pot spoker on the tax rolls, regardless of your opinion on the fucked up Drug War (oops, I let my opinion slip)

DFF
07-29-2008, 09:37 PM
That's fucking outrageous. :mad:

Jamsie 567
07-29-2008, 09:41 PM
That's messed up, up to 20 years for just mere possession of marijuana? There's going to be a lot of teenagers and college students in prison...

You got your work cut out for you hear haha. Glad to see you join the RP forums site to add some diversity. I am curious what the law enforcement community think of Ron Paul if they have an opinion? It's my experaince he crosses all borders and really unites us all with this message. Thank you.

Liberty4Free
07-29-2008, 11:06 PM
Ridiculous! And that's why we have the highest incarceration rate. :mad:

speciallyblend
07-29-2008, 11:07 PM
well this thread is reason enough to move to Colorado;)

Paulitical Correctness
07-29-2008, 11:57 PM
They're cycling people through the system faster than they can let them out. Prisons are getting ridiculously overcrowded, and as they're forced to let people out more and more are waking up to the atrocities of our government. Ex cons can barely find work as it is, and when they make criminals out of good people they're just making a societal collapse more inevitable.

Effin' absurd.

V-rod
07-30-2008, 09:13 AM
I think jail time for pot is stupid and a waste of money and resources.



But to quote Jim Carrey..

"STOP BREAKING THE LAW A**HOLE!!!!"



Seriously, put the bong down and do something constructive.

porcupine
07-30-2008, 09:30 AM
Here in New Hampshire, we were able to get Cannabis decrim through the house, but it died in the senate. As more people move in with the Free State Project, we should be able to get it through eventually (probably not for another 3 years or so).

Bruno
07-30-2008, 12:43 PM
I think jail time for pot is stupid and a waste of money and resources.



But to quote Jim Carrey..

"STOP BREAKING THE LAW A**HOLE!!!!"



Seriously, put the bong down and do something constructive.


Many of them are doing something constructive. Like going to work every day as businessman, business owners, lawyers, doctors, police officers, fire fighters, city clerks, etc. etc. etc. They just also choose to smoke cannabis recreationally at home after work or on the weekends, when others chose to have a beer or a cocktail. They spend far fewer days calling in sick for their recreational drug than do users of alcohol syndrome ("brown bottle flu" costs the U.S. Billions of dollars annually in lost productivity).