Judge, Prosecutors: Pot Is 'No Big Deal'

Jim Finnel

Fallen Cannabis Warrior & Ex News Moderator
It’s a messed-up message.

By refusing last week to legalize medical marijuana, the Illinois House said this: Drug dealers and gangs win. Taxpayers lose.

The response to a recent column about the legalization of pot has me more convinced than ever the time has come to end a costly, dangerous and ineffective prohibition.

But don’t take my word for it.

Maybe you can imagine my surprise when Iowa 7th District Senior Associate Judge Douglas McDonald, of Bettendorf, wrote to say he also hopes to see cases of pot possession “de-emphasized or legalized.”

McDonald is 75. He served on the bench from 1988 until his retirement in 2007. He continues to serve on a part-time basis. He has never tried marijuana.

“In Scott County, we do about 5,000 indictable misdemeanors a year, and 25 percent of those are marijuana possessions,” he began in an interview Friday. “(Most) cases have an arraignment, pretrial, motion hearings, judges, prosecutors, public defenders and police officers who have to take time off to come to court.

“Public defenders are paid $400 to $500 per case, and they may have 1,000 of them. And that’s just Scott County. This is my primary concern: It’s all needless.”

McDonald acknowledges he is neither a doctor nor a chemist, but his 19-plus years on the bench have opened his eyes to the realities of all kinds of drugs. Marijuana, in his estimation, “is no big deal.”

“I guess that’s not what a judge is supposed to say,” he added. “But, from what I’ve seen, it doesn’t cause people to do bad things. It doesn’t make them angry. Unless you work with it like I do, you wouldn’t know that.”

To be clear, the judge does not advocate pot smoking. He is, in fact, opposed to any form of smoking, because it is harmful.

“But I also know what alcohol does to people, and it’s pretty severe,” he said. “I don’t see marijuana itself hurting people. Cocaine does that. Methamphetamine does that. In my opinion and my experience, marijuana is not like that.”

The experiences and opinions of another courtroom regular are strikingly similar to that of the judge.

James Gierach is a former Cook County, Ill., prosecutor who serves on the board for a group called LEAP — Law Enforcement Against Prohibition.

He testified before the Iowa Board of Pharmacy last year, which voted unanimously to recommend the Iowa legislature legalize medical marijuana. He said the war on drugs was lost a long time ago and is only creating more crime.

“Pick a crisis: guns, gangs, prisons we can’t afford, health-care bills we can’t pay … yet

60 percent of the money made by Mexican drug cartels is coming from marijuana,” he said. “All you have to do is join a gang, get a gun, (because) we’ve put a pot of gold next to the thing we said people can’t have: drugs.”

The criminalization of pot has been especially good for gangs, he said, because that is where they make their money.

“All you need to go into the drug business is a pair of tennis shoes and a gun,” he said. “We corrupt the police just like we do the kids because of temptation.”

Illegal drugs not only put police in danger via enforcement attempts, Gierach said, but put officers in a position to make criminal decisions, too. Drug money that is confiscated in busts often cannot be precisely accounted for, he said, and thousands of dollars in drug money often are left in the hands of a cop’s conscience.

And then there are the jails.

“We have 2.3 million people in prison — the highest rate of incarceration in the world,” he said Friday. “In Cook County, more than half the inmates are nonviolent (no gun was used in the crime) drug offenders.

“The most unproductive thing you can do with a dollar is build a jail. We are hiring people to watch people who are doing nothing. Besides, you build a prison, and you don’t have the money to build a school.”

LEAP’s mantra is: Legalize, regulate, tax. Its members point out the end of alcohol prohibition put Al Capone and his thugs out of business. They no longer were killing cops and hiding millions.

Maybe all of that is too far from our backyard?

So consider the viewpoint of Jeff Terronez, Rock Island County state’s attorney.

He predicted the “feel-good” medical marijuana law would have created a slew of legal challenges. But that doesn’t mean minor pot possession should remain a crime.

“My suspicion is this: If the law passes, everyone who smokes marijuana is going to come up with a reason to use it,” he said of the medical marijuana measure that failed. “If they want to legalize marijuana, they should legalize it. My personal opinion: If the State of Illinois legalizes marijuana, I’m not going to lose any sleep over it.”

The ones losing sleep, say Gierach and McDonald, are politicians who are too afraid to enter the fray.

“The most important thing to a legislator is his or her seat,” Gierach said.

McDonald told of a conversation he had with a former police officer-turned-Iowa-legislator, a Republican.

“He was sympathetic to what I was saying, and he agreed with the inefficiencies and needlessness of criminalization,” the judge recalled. “But his answer was, ‘Maybe you know of some Democrat you could talk to?’

“No one wants to appear soft on crime.”

Some people will read this column and, for a moment or two, agree the arguments for decriminalization make sense. But the myths, hysteria and propaganda are hard to shake.

In fact, they’re almost addicting.


NewsHawk: Jim Behr: 420 MAGAZINE
Source: qctimes.com
Author: Barb Ickes
Copyright: 2011 The Quad-City Times
Contact: The Quad-City Times
Website: Judge, prosecutors: Pot is 'no big deal'
 
I really wish the politicians would just do the right thing for a change. The judges see it, law enforcement sees it (LEAP), heck, even the DEA knows it. From what I read not too long ago, the Dept. of HHS has told the DEA that cannabis is to be taken off Schedule 1 and re-classified. I am waiting for them to comply, it's been over a year since the recommendation came to them from HHS.
Here we are, in the land of the free, and many people cannot choose to use cannabis for pain relief because they live in the wrong state. Or for chemo, etc. Instead, the docs prescribe them addictive pain relievers, like Percoset, Morphine, Demoral, etc. (I don't know if I spelled those right, never taken any of them lol). Yet the government knows it's the right thing to do, but as the article says, they are too afraid to look soft on crime or lose their "seat". The thing is, if a handful of them just said, let's do this and get it over with, and at least legalized medical cannabis, the rest of the politicians would follow suit, because with those people it seems to mostly be "monkey see, monkey do".
I really hope cannabis is legalized during my lifetime. I see quite a few articles that foreshadow this happening, now if only it would happen NOW so good, law abiding people could choose to use cannabis instead of worse prescription drugs.
 
Totally agree, CocoJoe! I think they do, but just ignore their conscience. I think the money and power blinds them badly, but deep down, they know what they are doing. If they don't, then they are literally insane, and if that's the case, I think we ought to fire them pretty darn quick lol.
 
jobs my friend ...jobs.

If you cut everything to 0% funding besides education, medicare/medicaid/, and PRISONS ... you only would only reduce spending 10%.

THe biggest chunk is medicare/medicaid (Depending on the state you reside) followed closely by prisons.

Prisons are a HUGE expense. The theory ..and even proven in some cases ... is reducing the amount of prisoners... dumbfuck states like Illinois will release murders, rapists, and even molesters to make room for pot smokers/growers.

IMHO ..what needs to happen:

Someone like NORML or Nat Geo needs to follow an arrest for someone with cannabis ... and then investigate the more important other end ... documenting who has been released to make room for the cannabis offender.

You start parading around folks that have killed kids ... or raped women...or done drivebys holding up gang signs for the camera .... and tell the camera ..these guys were released so that >>>camera cuts in to some regular joe with a regular job stopped for a broken license plate light and then searched and found 28grams of grass... can be put in prison. Then they take his home, car, kids, and basically life away all while bankrupting you.

My little league coach (many many years ago) was arrested for having a dozen plants on his farm. 7 years later he was released from prison without a pot to piss in.
 
NuhNugz has the real story.
Having been involed in the arrest and take all away thing, I know.
It is called injustice.

:peace: cocoJoe
 
I totally agree that the war on drugs is full of victims. Every person put in jail because of cannabis is a victim. Doesn't matter if they are dealing or not, growing, selling, smoking eating, whatever. Cannabis should not be illegal in the first place. Prohibition has caused some of the worst criminals, which is what we have now. It's insane. Legalize it, and save lives. Stop putting otherwise law abiding citizens with jobs and families in jail for a plant. It's not hemlock, it won't kill us.
I'm preaching to the choir, I know. Sorry. We all agree it should be legal. I just wish I could reach the non believing masses with a sensible message that they would listen to and understand, and change their minds. Does that sound like religion? lol. It did to me for a second there haha. Maybe it is. Or maybe it just opens us up to the fact that there is something bigger out there than us.
Ok, I am done talking :tokin:
 
I just wish I could reach the non believing masses with a sensible message that they would listen to and understand, and change their minds.

These people are frightened because of Government brainwashing.
Dumb em down and we can control them! Go Government! :cheer:

:peace: cocoJoe
 
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