Some sense in our drug laws

by John MacBeath Watkins

One of the most popular posts on this blog is one proposing a peace treaty to end the drug wars. Now my state, Washington, and the state of Colorado, have signed on. Television newsreaders have responded mostly with giggles, so you have to go to the "print" (pixeled?) media for the straight dope.

This is from an AP story that ran in the Seattle Times:

Misdemeanor cases of marijuana possession will be dropped in Washington's largest counties after voters legalized the drug, prosecutors said Friday.
Associated Press

SEATTLE — Misdemeanor cases of marijuana possession will be dropped in Washington's largest counties after voters legalized the drug, prosecutors said Friday.
King County was dropping 175 cases, prosecutor Dan Satterberg said. Pierce County prosecutor Mark Lindquist said his office will do the same, but he didn't immediately know the number of cases affected.
Under Initiative 502, possession of an ounce or less of marijuana will be legal for people 21 years or older after Dec. 6. The initiative passed on Tuesday with 55 percent of the vote.
"Although the effective date of I-502 is not until Dec. 6, there is no point in continuing to seek criminal penalties for conduct that will be legal next month," Satterberg said in a statement.
The cases in King County involve people over 21 who possessed one ounce or less of marijuana. Dropping those pot cases won't ease caseload, said prosecutor's office spokesman Dan Donohoe, noting that 6,700 misdemeanor cases were tried in 2011.
Lindquist cautioned, however, that cases of possession of marijuana linked to other charges, such as drunken driving for example, would proceed. The cases affected are solely marijuana possession, he said.
In Snohomish County, chief criminal deputy prosecutor Joan Cavagnaro said her office is in a "holding pattern." A call to the Spokane County prosecutor's office was not immediately returned.
Along with Washington, Colorado also legalized recreational use of marijuana on Tuesday. A legalization measure was defeated in Oregon.
Besides de-criminalizing possession, Washington's initiative also sets up a state-run regulatory system that will license growing and stores to sell marijuana.
State officials, however, are awaiting a response on the initiative from the federal government, which still considers the drug illegal and could intervene in court.
Some legal experts believe that the de-criminalization provision in the law could survive a legal challenge.
"The parts that are more likely to be enjoined are probably the parts where you got states actually authorizing the growing, the sales - with pretty direct conflict with federal law," said Mary Fan, a University of Washington law professor and former federal prosecutor.

The change is beginning. It's only a beginning, and it will take time for the message to sink in, and spread across the country. But the obvious has a way of making itself known. When something has become so much a part of our society, making it illegal only undermines the rule of law.

At that point, the quickest way to reduce crime is to make certain things legal. It's the one thing I strongly agree with libertarians about, and I credit them with the only sensible policy proposals to cut the crime rate.

The result will be fewer criminals, and more resources devoted to law enforcement that actually makes a positive difference in peoples' lives. And that can only make people respect the law more in the end.

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