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News (Media Awareness Project) - US IL: Editorial: Policing The Pot Patrol
Title:US IL: Editorial: Policing The Pot Patrol
Published On:2004-09-23
Source:Chicago Tribune (IL)
Fetched On:2008-01-17 23:29:58
POLICING THE POT PATROL

Chicago Police Sgt. Thomas Donegan was in court one day last January
awaiting the appearance of two men he had arrested for possession of
marijuana. Neither man showed up. A warrant was issued for one, but
the other's case was dismissed.

That was typical. The people who are arrested on misdemeanor charges
of possession of less than 30 grams of pot routinely are not
prosecuted. The reasons vary: Cops don't show up in court, there are
problems with the evidence or the arrest, judges or prosecutors don't
think the case is worth pursuing.

Donegan collected some statistics to present to Police Supt. Philip
Cline.

Last year, Chicago police arrested more than 20,000 people for
misdemeanor possession of less than 30 grams of marijuana. According
to Donegan's numbers: 94 percent of the cases that involved less than
2 1/2 grams were dropped, 81 percent of the cases that involved 2 1/2
to 10 grams were dropped, and 52 percent of the cases that involved 10
to 30 grams were dropped.

So what's the point of making an arrest?

This Chicago cop believes the city would be better off making
possession of small amounts of marijuana a violation of city
ordinance, punishable by a fine, rather than going through the charade
of criminal prosecution with the empty threat of jail time.

Mayor Richard Daley agrees. "If 99 percent of the cases are thrown out
and we have police officers going [to court], why?" the mayor said
Wednesday. "It costs you a lot of money for police officers to go to
court." Cook County State's Atty. Richard Devine's office will meet
with police to discuss this proposal.

The idea has a lot of merit. It offers a proportional response to the
illegal use of marijuana, and it carries the prospect of genuine
punishment. If you were caught with a small amount of marijuana, you
would get a ticket. Those who are guilty would have to pay. Donegan
recommends fines of $250, $500 and $1,000 for the three categories of
possession.

That would free up the police, prosecutors and judges for far more
important criminal matters. It would bring some much-needed revenue to
the city. It would bring some common sense to drug policy.
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