Marijuana Arrests Continue To Fall As Decriminalization And Legalization Spread

The General

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According to FBI numbers released today, police made 1,501,043 drug arrests last year, down from 1,552,432 in 2012, a drop of about 3 percent. Marijuana accounted for about 693,000 of those arrests (46 percent), down from about 750,000 (48 percent) in 2012. The 7.6 percent drop in pot busts entirely accounts for the decline in total drug arrests, which otherwise would have risen. As usual, the vast majority of marijuana arrests–88 percent, or about 609,000–involved simple possession, as opposed to manufacture or sale.

The peak year for marijuana arrests was 2007, when there were about 873,000, three times as many as in 1991. The number fell to 848,000 in 2008, rebounded to 858,000 in 2009, and has been declining since then. Contributing to that trend, Colorado and Washington last year stopped arresting people for possessing less than an ounce of marijuana, as required by legalization measures that voters approved in 2012. Prior to that change, Colorado police were arresting about 10,000 people for marijuana possession each year. The annual number in Washington was about 6,000. Marijuana possession arrests in New York City, which peaked at more than 50,000 in 2011, also fell last year, from 39,218 to 28,644.

The downward national trend should continue. Washington, D.C., decriminalized marijuana possession last spring, and today the NYPD announced that it will further reduce arrests of cannabis consumers, beginning later this month. A legalization measure approved by voters in Alaska last week will eliminate arrests for possessing up to an ounce in public (possession of small amounts in the home was already protected under a 1975 Alaska Supreme Court decision). Oregon, the other state where voters approved legalization last week, had already decriminalized possession of less than an ounce (although the ballot initiative will eliminate the fine). Residents of those three jurisdictions also voted to abolish penalties for home cultivation within specified limits. If approved, the marijuana initiatives that are expected to be on the ballot in 2016 could take another bite out of pot busts, although California, Maine, and Massachusetts, three states where such measures are likely, already have decriminalized possession of small amounts.

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News Moderator - The General @ 420 MAGAZINE ®
Source: Reason.com
Author: Jacob Sullum
Contact: Contact Us
Website: Marijuana Arrests Continue to Fall As Decriminalization and Legalization Spread - Hit & Run : Reason.com
 
I wonder when Cannabis will be de-listed from the Controlled Substances Act or amended to be a non schedule I or II drug?

:peace:
 
I remember my lone interaction with a cop in NYC. It was spring of 1988 and I just scored a dime from a street dealer. I thought I ducked behind a building out of sight of the cop, wrong. He didn't arrest me or even write mea ticket. He did make me stuff my dime bag down the sewer. Ouch. "Don't come back to this neighborhood to buy your drugs", he said. I replied, "I live in this neighborhood"(Probably not the smartest thing to say). Then he said "Well buy your drugs someplace else". I guess I was just lucky that he had other things to do that evening or else my life would have been ruined with an arrest record.
 
I grew up in California and got popped for plants when it was a felony to have even one. Luckily I was one week short of being 18 so it wasn't a permanent black mark. In the 45 years since then I have had to dump bags of weed many times, since it seems like not being jacked up by police on a regular basis is only now tapering off a bit. I guess it's partially too easy for them to pick out the people who are likely to fit the profile, and they like to take the easy way out. Lying about the circumstances has to weigh against the "good case" requirement since they don't like having courts rule against them and it's certainly getting better all the time. I don't think I will ever feel comfortable when I see a cop. They have traumatized me repeatedly, oh and by the way, I have never been arrested.
 
A friend once told me he let a guy with a gun run away, or he didn't give chase, because his shift was almost over and there was too much paper work. We are all human. I can imagine this happening almost 50% of the time, depending on the magnitude of the crime.
 
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