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Decriminalization passed in House ... Governor will sign. Marijuana is going to be de

iSMOKE.KUSH

Active member
Veteran
http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2011/jun/07/connecticut_legislature_passes_m

The Connecticut Senate Saturday narrowly approved a bill that would decriminalize the possession of small amounts of marijuana. The vote was an 18-18 tie until Lt. Gov. Nancy Wyman (D), in her position as president of the Senate, cast the tie-breaking vote to put the measure over the top.


Pot%20leaf_4.jpg
Connecticut is about to join the ranks of the decrim states. (Image via Wikimedia.org)

On Monday, it passed the House. It is supported by Gov. Dan Malloy (D), who Saturday urged the House to pass it.

Under current law, the possession of "any usable amount" of marijuana is a misdemeanor punishable by up to a year in jail and a $1,000. The fine jumps to $3,000 for subsequent offenses.

The bill, Senate Bill 1014, would make possession of less than a half-ounce of pot a civil infraction punishable by a maximum fine of $150. Fines jump to from $200 to $500 for subsequent violations. People under 21 would see their drivers' licenses suspended for 60 days, similar to the punishment for minors in possession of alcohol. Under an amendment by marijuana foe Rep. Toni Boucher (R-Wilton) and accepted by Democrats, anyone thrice cited for small-time possession would be required to seek drug treatment.

Supporters of the bill argued that slapping people with a criminal record for small-time pot possession unfairly burdened them and the criminal justice system, but opponents said it sent the wrong message.

"It puts into jeopardy the future endeavors of such young people," said Sen. Eric Coleman (D-Bloomfield) co-chairman of the General Assembly's Judiciary Committee. "Decriminalizing the use and possession of small amounts of marijuana is a better course and in the best interest of young people whose judgment may not be fully matured."

Senate Majority Leader Martin Looney (D-New Haven) stressed that lawmakers were not legalizing marijuana. "We are not enforcing the use of illegal drugs. We strongly disapprove of their use, but we're trying to realign their punishment that is more appropriate," he said, adding that the state should be focusing its scarce criminal justice resources on dangerous offenders.

But Boucher had dire warnings for Connecticut if the bill passed. "When we do this, and it has been shown in other states that have gone down this path, there is both an increase in use and an increase in crime," said Boucher, who also opposes another bill that would fully legalize the medical use of marijuana.

Senate Minority Leader John McKinney (R-Fairfield) used a version of the discredited gateway theory to bolster his opposition. He told solons his old sister had started with marijuana, then went on to become addicted to cocaine and other drugs before getting clean after treatment.

"For me, a policy that lessens the severity of drug use is a bad one," he said. "I don't believe we should just give up."

After the bill passed the Senate, Gov. Malloy urged the House to approve "a commonsense" criminal justice reform. The state is "doing more harm than good when we prosecute people who are caught using marijuana -- needlessly stigmatizing them in a way they would not if they were caught drinking underage," he said.

Now, the legislature has done as the governor asked. Expect Malloy to sign the bill shortly.


Hartford, CT United States


 

BigDawg

Member
ah nevermind i thought KY decriminalized it. Looks like they just made it a class B misdemeanor. Still progress.


Anyways, congrats to Connecticut.
 
K

KSP

ah nevermind i thought KY decriminalized it. Looks like they just made it a class B misdemeanor. Still progress.


Anyways, congrats to Connecticut.


No problem. I was really hoping you had wind of something; I've been out of town a lot and not following local stuff.
 

armedoldhippy

Well-known member
Veteran
Doesn't sound decriminalized to me if you're still getting fined.


i'll take a fine over 11/29, $750 fine, probation for a year, & $45 a lick each month to prob. officer. PLUS, not losing my job over a civil fine versus criminal record. "what did you say, officer? mail in a $100 bill & its fixed? what is the address? ":dance013::thank you:
 
I

Iron_Lion

The whole country should adopt decrim. Screw legalization, keep their grubby mitts out of the cookie jar!
 
T

TribalSeeds

I had my license suspended for nearly 4 years after getting caught with a joint when I was 14 in CA. Im still bitter about that
 

Hydro-Soil

Active member
Veteran
The whole country should adopt decrim. Screw legalization, keep their grubby mitts out of the cookie jar!

If you want their mitts out of the jar... legalize so there are no restrictions unless you go commercial.

Any sort of decrim will still line their pockets with growers and 'dealers' going to prison.

It needs to be as regulated as lettuce. Grow all you want, give it away, eat it, smoke it, give it to your rabbits. You want to sell it? Ok... now we talk licensing and permits and blah blah blah.

Until then, you and your neighbors are suffering in ways you can't even begin to imagine.

Stay Safe! :blowbubbles:
 

Stoner4Life

Medicinal Advocate
ICMag Donor
Veteran



Senate Majority Leader Martin Looney (D-New Haven) stressed that lawmakers were not legalizing marijuana. "We are not enforcing the use of illegal drugs. We strongly disapprove of their use, but we're trying to realign their punishment that is more appropriate," he said, adding that the state should be focusing its scarce criminal justice resources on dangerous offenders.

But Boucher had dire warnings for Connecticut if the bill passed. "When we do this, and it has been shown in other states that have gone down this path, there is both an increase in use and an increase in crime," said Boucher, who also opposes another bill that would fully legalize the medical use of marijuana.

This last paragraph needs to be examined carefully:
Use will go up and crime will go up, well I agree.


I'd bet bottom dollar that usage of alcohol went way up when prohibition ended in 1933 and why the fuck wouldn't it? when there's no longer a fear of jail for something then more people will indulge in its use.


Crime will go up! I said that I agreed above but was just tweaking my post a bit for the effect.

As alluded to in the last sentence of the first quoted paragraph authorities will be able to focus their attention to more serious crimes. Once you eliminate all those petty bullshit cannabis offenses then cops will be arresting more people for other shit, but it will be the same shit they were getting away with while cops were busting tokers. There won't be an increase in crime, just an increase of arrests for crimes not related to weed.
 
T

TribalSeeds

Crime is going up, I agree, but it has nothing to do with the herb. Unless you count the street dealers who are no longer able to make ends meet turning to crime.
 

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