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Law The Cannabis Chronicles - Misc Cannabis News

Along the same lines, I like this quote from this article:

http://hightimes.com/news/report-trump-dumps-pharma-backed-drug-czar/

“The tide of public opinion is turning against the drug war and Trump would be wise to nominate a drug czar who supports reform, including treating drug use as a health issue instead of a criminal justice issue,” said Bill Piper, senior director of the office of national affairs at the Drug Policy Alliance, which led a campaign opposing Marino from the moment his name was mentioned. “The next drug czar doesn’t have to be a scientist or have an extensive medical background to be effective, but they should understand science and take an evidence-based approach towards drug policy.”

That would be smart.

But considering Trump’s pick to solve the opiate crisis, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, recently declared marijuana legalization was a leftist plot on the level of water fluoridation, prepare for the usual outrage and disappointment.​
 
Another article on Rohrabacher-Farr amendment — now called the Rohrabacher-Blumenauer amendment

Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions may believe that “good people don’t smoke pot,” but a new spending package approved by the House of Representatives on Wednesday demonstrates the majority of congressional representatives believe medical marijuana states need protection from the Department of Justice (DOJ).

Passed by a vote of 309 -118, the compromise bill to fund the government through September includes the extension of an unambiguous provision that keeps the DOJ from attacking stakeholders within medical marijuana states.

Included in the $1.1 trillion omnibus that ends September 30th is the renewed Rohrabacher-Farr amendment — now called the Rohrabacher-Blumenauer amendment — which explicitly restricts the Department of Justice from utilizing any allocated funds to go after state-sanctioned medical marijuana cultivators, dispensaries, or patients.

Rohrabacher-Blumenauer amendment: “None of the funds made available in this Act to the Department of Justice may be used, with respect to any of the States of Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming, or with respect to the District of Columbia, Guam, or Puerto Rico, to prevent any of them from implementing their own laws that authorize the use, distribution, possession, or cultivation of medical marijuana.”

Continuing a sensible tradition first established during the Obama administration, this amendment has been restricting the DOJ and protecting MMJ business interests in medical marijuana states in every consecutive budget since 2014.

With marijuana now more popular than most elected officials, the passage of this bill demonstrates today’s congressional leaders are listening to the pleas of their constituents. Mysteriously missing from the protective amendment, Indiana and North Dakota were not included in the above list.

Still under threat, many believe the next battleground will be those states with recreational marijuana laws. Under federal law, and with the backing of the current administration, the DOJ and the DEA still wield the power to crush lives, dismantle dreams, and incarcerate individuals for participating in the fast-growing recreational marijuana markets across the country.

Providing our greatest hope for dodging the federal bullet of interference in states that have passed recreational marijuana laws, a bipartisan bill introduced last month would transfer marijuana from its current Controlled Substance Act (CSA) Schedule I status down to a Schedule II substance. If passed, marijuana would have the same classification as Codeine and Oxycodone. If successfully rescheduled as a Schedule II narcotic within the CSA, doctors would be allowed to prescribe it (theoretically) and its new classification would remove major roadblocks to important research. Additionally, this could potentially change how the cannabis industry accesses traditional banking services.

So, Congress shoved it up Sessions' patooty and broke it off. Glad they got something right about MMJ.
 
NIDA statement on Medical Marijuana and Opioid Use Outcomes
The U.S. Government National Institure of Health NIDA, the National Instiute of Drug Abuse released a update concerning medical marijuana and dispensaries related to the decrease of opioid use and overdoses. Ohio Patient Network applauds the NIDA for recognizing and making this statement.

"NIDA funded two recent studies that explored the relationship between marijuana legalization and adverse outcomes associated with prescription opioids. The first found an association between medical marijuana legalization and a reduction in overdose deaths from opioid pain relievers, an effect that strengthened in each year following the implementation of legislation.78 The population-based nature of this study does not establish a causal relationship or give evidence for changes in pain patient behavior.79,80

The second NIDA-funded study, a more detailed analysis by the RAND Corporation, showed that legally protected access to medical marijuana dispensaries is associated with lower levels of opioid prescribing, lower self-report of nonmedical prescription opioid use, lower treatment admissions for prescription opioid use disorders, and reduction in prescription opioid overdose deaths.81 Notably, the reduction in deaths was present only in states with dispensaries (not just medical marijuana laws) and was greater in states with active dispensaries.

Research into the effects of cannabis on opioid use in pain patients is limited, but data suggest that medical cannabis treatment may reduce the dose of opioids required for pain relief.82,83 In addition to its research portfolio on the roles of the cannabinoid and opioid systems in pain, NIDA is funding additional studies that will provide data relating to medical marijuana and opioids:

  • effects of access to medical marijuana on substance use, including nonmedical use of prescription opioids (project numbers DA031816-05, DA039293-01A1, DA037341-02, DA032693-04)
  • mental and physical functioning of a cohort of pain patients seeking medical marijuana treatment (DA033397-03)
  • the impact of medical marijuana policies on health outcomes (DA034067-03)
Another recent study analyzed Medicare prescription drug coverage data and found that availability of medical marijuana significantly reduced prescribing of medications used for conditions that medical marijuana can treat, including opioids for pain.84Overall savings for all prescription drugs were estimated to be $165.2 million in 2013."


NIDA missiion is to lead the nation in bringing the power of science to bear on drug abuse and addiction.
Source NIH- National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)

https://www.drugabuse.gov/publications/marijuana/marijuana-safe-effective-medicine
 
National District Attorneys Association Calls For Federal Anti-Marijuana Crackdown

Arlington, VA: The National District Attorneys Association is calling for the federal government to strictly enforce anti-cannabis laws in states that have regulated its production and distribution for either medical or recreational purposes.

In a new white paper, the group recommends that the Trump administration set aside the 2013 Cole memorandum directing US Attorneys not to interfere with state legalization efforts and those licensed to engage in the plant's tightly regulated production and sale.

"To maintain respect for the rule of law, it is essential that federal drug enforcement policy regarding the manufacture, importation, possession, use and distribution of marijuana be applied consistently across the nation," the NDAA paper concludes.

The National District Attorneys Association is the largest and oldest prosecutor organization in the country.

For more information, please contact Paul Armentano, NORML Deputy Director, at: paul@norml.org.


Ok, so you are a criminal lawyer and happen to be on the prosecuting side of our adversarial judicial system. But how does doing so seem to automatically make you into a fascist moron who would join in such a call. Sigh.
 
National District Attorneys Association Calls For Federal Anti-Marijuana Crackdown

Arlington, VA: The National District Attorneys Association is calling for the federal government to strictly enforce anti-cannabis laws in states that have regulated its production and distribution for either medical or recreational purposes.

In a new white paper, the group recommends that the Trump administration set aside the 2013 Cole memorandum directing US Attorneys not to interfere with state legalization efforts and those licensed to engage in the plant's tightly regulated production and sale.

"To maintain respect for the rule of law, it is essential that federal drug enforcement policy regarding the manufacture, importation, possession, use and distribution of marijuana be applied consistently across the nation," the NDAA paper concludes.

The National District Attorneys Association is the largest and oldest prosecutor organization in the country.

For more information, please contact Paul Armentano, NORML Deputy Director, at: paul@norml.org.


Ok, so you are a criminal lawyer and happen to be on the prosecuting side of our adversarial judicial system. But how does doing so seem to automatically make you into a fascist moron who would join in such a call. Sigh.
Do these people suffer from some kind of disorder?
CANNABIS is safer than most products!
Bars are legal?
 
"To maintain respect for the rule of law, it is essential that federal drug enforcement policy regarding the manufacture, importation, possession, use and distribution of marijuana be applied consistently across the nation,"
I agree with this statement. Just not the way they are applying it. :hmm: And it really makes one ponder wtf this agency of prosecutors gets out of promoting crackdowns. Must be about billing dollars. :cool: You would think there is enough crime to prosecute without marijuana convictions.
 
I agree with this statement. Just not the way they are applying it. :hmm: And it really makes one ponder wtf this agency of prosecutors gets out of promoting crackdowns. Must be about billing dollars. :cool: You would think there is enough crime to prosecute without marijuana convictions.
Prohibition....among other equally unpopular laws....shows that when Government does not reflect the views and desires of the citizenship, the citizenship will not obey them and eventually these laws must be changed. In the case of MJ, the Government is further behind the views of the citizenship than almost any other issue I can think of short of ending the Vietnam War (well, police action if you listened to the Feds at the time...I remember it well).
 
"The proposed cut to the office, formally known as White House Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP), would include the complete elimination of two major initiatives: The High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (HIDTA) program and the Drug-Free Communities Support Program (DFC)."

Hi Mitch - I think this is great news. Certainly the Democrats are not going to bitch over this cut in budget request for the ONDCP. I certainly hope this draconian cut is indeed enacted.

I don't know much about DFC but I have read output from The High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (HIDTA) program and its nothing but reefer madness propaganda and they need to quit spending our money on this bullshit.
 
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California police looking to nab marijuana-impaired drivers with roadside saliva test

Police agencies in California are zeroing in on ways to test drivers impaired by marijuana and other drugs, a task which took on a new sense of urgency after voters legalized recreational marijuana in November.

At the Capitol on Wednesday, law enforcement officers demonstrated a mouth-swab device that detects marijuana impairment in drivers and provides results within minutes.

“As someone who spent 28 years with the California Highway Patrol, I have personally witnessed the tragedies that are associated with this problem,” said Assemblyman Tom Lackey, R-Palmdale, whose office organized the event. “When people drive impaired they are really putting themselves and others at risk.”

The machine, an Alere DDS2 with a price tag of nearly $6,000, looks similar to a credit card reader and detects the presence of up to six different drugs in someone’s saliva.

After completing standard field sobriety tests and a breathalyzer screening during the simulation, police asked a woman acting as a drugged driver to rub a swab inside her cheeks to gather fluids. The officer then inserted the swab into a machine.

The Sacramento Police Department previously tested a similar Alere product in a year-long pilot program with the state Office of Traffic Safety that began in October 2013. Mouth swab devices are currently in use by police in San Diego and Los Angeles, as well as other states.

“We wanted to see how accurate and how valid the results were from an immediate test versus the typical blood draw,” said Officer Matthew McPhail, a Sacramento police spokesman.

McPhail said the equipment proved accurate, but did not eliminate other steps officers must take to legally establish that someone is under the influence of drugs. Ultimately, the department decided to forgo purchasing the expensive equipment and continues to prove drug impairment through sobriety tests and subsequent blood samples.

“If we can’t use the system functionally for legal reasons, we aren’t going to spend money on it,” McPhail said. He added that Sacramento police may still adopt the device or similar products in the future.

Proposition 64, the recreational marijuana ballot measure, provided the California Highway Patrol with $3 million a year for four years to come up with protocols to determine whether a driver is too impaired to drive.

Assembly Bill 6, introduced by Assemblyman Lackey, would also form a CHP task force to examine different roadside technologies to detect drug impairment.


 
California police looking to nab marijuana-impaired drivers with roadside saliva test

Police agencies in California are zeroing in on ways to test drivers impaired by marijuana and other drugs, a task which took on a new sense of urgency after voters legalized recreational marijuana in November.

At the Capitol on Wednesday, law enforcement officers demonstrated a mouth-swab device that detects marijuana impairment in drivers and provides results within minutes.

“As someone who spent 28 years with the California Highway Patrol, I have personally witnessed the tragedies that are associated with this problem,” said Assemblyman Tom Lackey, R-Palmdale, whose office organized the event. “When people drive impaired they are really putting themselves and others at risk.”

The machine, an Alere DDS2 with a price tag of nearly $6,000, looks similar to a credit card reader and detects the presence of up to six different drugs in someone’s saliva.

After completing standard field sobriety tests and a breathalyzer screening during the simulation, police asked a woman acting as a drugged driver to rub a swab inside her cheeks to gather fluids. The officer then inserted the swab into a machine.

The Sacramento Police Department previously tested a similar Alere product in a year-long pilot program with the state Office of Traffic Safety that began in October 2013. Mouth swab devices are currently in use by police in San Diego and Los Angeles, as well as other states.

“We wanted to see how accurate and how valid the results were from an immediate test versus the typical blood draw,” said Officer Matthew McPhail, a Sacramento police spokesman.

McPhail said the equipment proved accurate, but did not eliminate other steps officers must take to legally establish that someone is under the influence of drugs. Ultimately, the department decided to forgo purchasing the expensive equipment and continues to prove drug impairment through sobriety tests and subsequent blood samples.

“If we can’t use the system functionally for legal reasons, we aren’t going to spend money on it,” McPhail said. He added that Sacramento police may still adopt the device or similar products in the future.

Proposition 64, the recreational marijuana ballot measure, provided the California Highway Patrol with $3 million a year for four years to come up with protocols to determine whether a driver is too impaired to drive.

Assembly Bill 6, introduced by Assemblyman Lackey, would also form a CHP task force to examine different roadside technologies to detect drug impairment.

I totally understand how news articles like this one can make You feel irritated and anxious.But there are ways to help prevent yourself getting a record and a fine.

Btw We have had these random lick the stick swab checks on our roads for over 10 years and they are an everyday occurrence.so mostly i would say get over it they are here to stay.

If You are non medical ,Abstain for at least 10 hours if possible.so stop at 10pm and You should pass a swab test at 8.
Good oral hygiene is key.before You drive .Clean youre teeth and gums roof of your mouth and tongue area witha toothbrush.Slooshing with apple cider vinegar after brushing may also help.The oral drager test units they use here use a disposable scraper to pick up traces of thc from the surface of your tongue.the scraper then folds over and distributes the tongue sample onto two porous pads.which are then dropped into an analyser unit inside their vehicle.the other oral test type they use here are the swab on a stick type.

Always carry a small bottle of vinegar in your vehicle near You and be prepared to administer it if You are pulled over.slooshing with diluted hydrogen peroxide is also supposed to help achieve a negative result.
Be careful too if You get pulled over and are on flu remedy medication as these can trigger a positive for opiods. they will then take You to their vehicle and conduct a second more stringent test that may show THC in your system.Best to avoid consuming anything that could trigger a thc positive on a follow up test.
There are also oral thc clean kits usually available from grow shops here that will Help You pass.little bottles of usually 50ml or so of unknown liquid and they cost about $50.sloosh some of the solution and it cleanses and also helps produce safe saliva to fool the tests.They do work.like vinegar or peroxide You need to have those few seconds to administer the solution before testing occurs.not always possible at last minute.

Personally i dont drive high.im lucky my partner drives me around at weekends.and luckily i havent been tested in work.they conduct random testing there too.
Cops usually test after dark over here or afternoons at weekends but usually afternoon trstin happens during important holidays easter,xmas etc.but not always.they usually set up in the same areas too usually around a blind corner.if you do get stopped dont be alarmed or arouse suspicion..cops will normally profile You and only test You under suspicion of recent usage.it takes 15mm to conduct a drug test so mostly they test for alcohol and wave You on which takes seconds.
We have a local facebook page here where drivers post any current checkpoints in the area..so start one up if there isnt already one in youre area.

Lastly life is too short to worry.we live with these rules now.it is only a matter of time before they arrive in your area.This will be the crux for having legal mj worldwide.i totally agree the tests are a joke because they dont test for impairment,

Our govt here now intend to test welfare recipients..out of love ...bless them.Click vvvvv

Federal budget 2017: Turnbull says welfare drug test policy 'based on love'

Good news though

Australia and New Zealand legalize hemp food products
Hemp seed for food only but its a good first step:weed:
 
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How will they check for suppositories on the roadside?
Oh... haven't you heard? That's @dorkus_molorkus ' new job! He moonlights at the zoo....

qi3Xxla.jpg


He's such a sweetheart though. He knows the trauma it causes motorists when he has to administer his tests so he always gives them a big hug afterwards.

tZzHewV.jpg
 
so he always gives them a big hug afterwards.

Big hug or a reach around? hmmm? LOL


Bipartisan legislation seeks to undermine Sessions’ sentencing memo

By Sari Horwitz, The Washington Post

WASHINGTON – Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ former colleagues in the Senate are pushing back on his order to federal prosecutors to pursue the most severe penalties possible for defendants, including mandatory minimum sentences, and introducing legislation to give federal judges more discretion to impose lower sentences.

Republican Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., who co-sponsored the legislation, said that Sessions’ new policy will “accentuate” the existing “injustice” in the criminal justice system.

Mandatory minimum sentences disproportionately affect minorities and low-income communities, while doing little to keep us safe and turning mistakes into tragedies,” said Paul. “As this legislation demonstrates, Congress can come together in a bipartisan fashion to change these laws.”

Last week, in a two-page memo to federal prosecutors across the country, Sessions overturned former attorney general Eric Holder’s sweeping criminal charging policy that instructed his prosecutors to avoid charging certain defendants with offenses that would trigger long mandatory minimum sentences. In its place, Sessions told his more than 5,000 assistant U.S. attorneys to charge defendants with the most serious crimes, carrying the toughest penalties.


After Sessions released his new policy, it drew bipartisan criticism that the policy would mark a return to mass incarceration, especially of minorities. It was embraced, however, by the National Association of Assistant United States Attorneys, whose president said it would restore more tools to do their jobs.

“An outgrowth of the failed War on Drugs, mandatory sentencing strips critical public safety resources away from law enforcement strategies that actually make our communities safer,” said Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt.

Leahy and Paul introduced the Justice Safety Valve Act with Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore. Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., and Rep. Bobby Scott, D-Va., are introducing a companion bill in the House. The legislation would allow federal judges to tailor sentences on a case-by-case basis. It would also reduce correctional spending, which currently accounts for nearly a third of Justice Department’s budget.

“Attorney General Sessions’ directive to all federal prosecutors to charge the most serious offenses, including [those that trigger] mandatory minimums, ignores the fact that mandatory minimum sentences have been studied extensively and have been found to distort rational sentencing systems, discriminate against minorities, waste money and often require a judge to impose sentences that violate common sense,” Scott said.


http://www.thecannabist.co/2017/05/18/rand-paul-sessions-drug-sentencing-mandatory-minimum/79793/
 
Prosecutors say Sessions’ severe penalities order “unnecessary and unfortunate”
Signers of an open letter to the Attorney General include Los Angeles City Attorney Mike Feuer, Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance Jr., and Karl Racine, attorney general of the District of Columbia


Published: May 23, 2017, 8:14 am • Updated: about 5 hours ago Comments (2)

By Lindsey Bever, The Washington Post

A week after U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions told federal prosecutors to “charge and pursue the most serious, readily provable offense” and follow mandatory minimum sentencing guidelines, a bipartisan group of prosecutors at the state and local level is expressing concern.

Thirty current and former state and local prosecutors have signed an open letter, which was released Friday by the nonprofit Fair and Just Prosecution. The prosecutors say that even though they do not have to answer Sessions’ call, the U.S. Attorney General’s directive “marks an unnecessary and unfortunate return to past ‘tough on crime’ practices” that will do more harm than good in their communities.

“What you’re seeing in this letter is a different wind of change that’s blowing through the criminal justice field,” said Miriam Krinsky, a former federal prosecutor and executive director of Fair and Just Prosecution, a national network working with newly elected prosecutors.

“There does seem at the federal level to be a return to the tough-on-crime, seek-the-maximum-sentence, charge-and-pursue-whatever-you-can-prove approach,” Krinsky said. But, she added, at a local level, some believe “there are costs that flow from prosecuting and sentencing and incarcerating anyone and everyone who crosses the line of the law, and we need to be more selective and smarter in how we promote both the safety and the health of our communities.”

Signers of the letter include Los Angeles City Attorney Mike Feuer, Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance Jr., and Karl Racine, attorney general of the District of Columbia.


The prosecutors say that there are no real benefits to Sessions’ May 10 directive, but they noted “significant costs.”

The letter states:

“The increased use of mandatory minimum sentences will necessarily expand the federal prison population and inflate federal spending on incarceration. There is a human cost as well. Instead of providing people who commit low-level drug offenses or who are struggling with mental illness with treatment, support and rehabilitation programs, the policy will subject them to decades of incarceration. In essence, the Attorney General has reinvigorated the failed ‘war on drugs,’ which is why groups ranging from the American Civil Liberties Union to the Cato Institute to Right on Crime have all criticized the newly announced policy.”

“It’s an interesting issue because the attorney general of the United States has no power over local prosecutors, so his directive doesn’t impact my work,” Deschutes County, Ore., District Attorney John Hummel said in an interview. “I thought it was important to tell the people in Deschutes County that this policy doesn’t bind me but I still disagree with it.”

Hummel, who is not affiliated with a political party, said the directive still will have an impact on his community, in that there are people in his jurisdiction who will be charged with federal crimes and prosecuted by the United States Attorney’s Office for the District of Oregon.

“If the United States Attorney for the District of Oregon is now going to be seeking a sentence that is as tough as possible with incarceration as opposed to seeking a sentence that is most likely to result in this person not committing a new crime, well that person is going to be more likely to commit a new crime in Deschutes County when he comes home,” Hummel said. “So this policy is going to make Deschutes County less safe under the guise of ‘tough on crime.’ So when I see that happening, it is relevant to Deschutes County.”

The signers say the purpose of the letter is to make it clear not all those in the justice system share Sessions’ view.

“It’s a national message because all of us signed it. But I wanted to say, ‘Hey, that’s not how we do things in King County,’ ” Daniel Satterberg, prosecuting attorney in King County, Wash., said about the letter. Satterberg said he is now nonpartisan but that he has been elected three times as a Republican. “We consider the facts of the case and the law, and come up with what I think is a pretty thoughtful approximation of justice . . . and it doesn’t always mean seeking the maximum charge and the maximum length of time.”

Racine, D, the attorney general of D.C., said Sessions’ policy is “a return to the nonsensical days of tough-on-crime rhetoric as opposed to evidence-based policy.”

Racine and 14 other attorneys general signed another open letter Thursday, urging Sessions to rescind the order calling for mandatory minimums from federal prosecutors.

“A broad, bipartisan consensus exists that ‘tough-on-crime’ approaches like mandatory minimum sentences for nonviolent, low-level offenses have not made our nation or our cities safer,” they wrote. “Simultaneously, there is strong evidence that contact with the justice system exacerbates the likelihood that a low-level offender will go on to commit more serious crimes. One-size-fits-all sentencing has, at best, a questionable deterrent effect.”

Larry Leiser, president of the National Association of Assistant United States Attorneys, which supports Sessions’ order, said the tough sentencing practice, which was put in place in the 1980s and reaffirmed by U.S. attorneys general several times since, establishes consistency among all federal prosecutors. “Consistency is the hallmark of justice,” Leiser said.

In 2013, then-Attorney General Eric Holder put an end to the longtime approach, saying such penalties should be reserved for “serious, high-level, or violent drug traffickers.”

“So what you have here is Sessions really going back to the long-standing practice of the Department of Justice,” Leiser said. “I think the vast majority of around the country are glad we’re back to the practice that served us so very well for so many years starting in 1981.”

But John Chisholm, D, district attorney in Milwaukee County, Wis., said certain approaches, such as mandatory minimums, did not accomplish what they intended.

“I’m just a firm believer in people using judgment and discretion in every case and that includes judges,” he said. “The approach has not been demonstrated to be particularly effective and I don’t think it enhances public safety – and in some ways, it takes us backwards instead of moving us forward.”

The abject stupidity of returning to mandatory sentences and the "War on Drugs" leaves me breathless with wonder. Really, what I'm wondering is if these cretins have enough intelligence to walk and chew gum...at the same time. sigh
 
Prosecutors say Sessions’ severe penalities order “unnecessary and unfortunate”
Signers of an open letter to the Attorney General include Los Angeles City Attorney Mike Feuer, Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance Jr., and Karl Racine, attorney general of the District of Columbia


Published: May 23, 2017, 8:14 am • Updated: about 5 hours ago Comments (2)

By Lindsey Bever, The Washington Post

A week after U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions told federal prosecutors to “charge and pursue the most serious, readily provable offense” and follow mandatory minimum sentencing guidelines, a bipartisan group of prosecutors at the state and local level is expressing concern.

Thirty current and former state and local prosecutors have signed an open letter, which was released Friday by the nonprofit Fair and Just Prosecution. The prosecutors say that even though they do not have to answer Sessions’ call, the U.S. Attorney General’s directive “marks an unnecessary and unfortunate return to past ‘tough on crime’ practices” that will do more harm than good in their communities.

“What you’re seeing in this letter is a different wind of change that’s blowing through the criminal justice field,” said Miriam Krinsky, a former federal prosecutor and executive director of Fair and Just Prosecution, a national network working with newly elected prosecutors.

“There does seem at the federal level to be a return to the tough-on-crime, seek-the-maximum-sentence, charge-and-pursue-whatever-you-can-prove approach,” Krinsky said. But, she added, at a local level, some believe “there are costs that flow from prosecuting and sentencing and incarcerating anyone and everyone who crosses the line of the law, and we need to be more selective and smarter in how we promote both the safety and the health of our communities.”

Signers of the letter include Los Angeles City Attorney Mike Feuer, Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance Jr., and Karl Racine, attorney general of the District of Columbia.


The prosecutors say that there are no real benefits to Sessions’ May 10 directive, but they noted “significant costs.”

The letter states:

“The increased use of mandatory minimum sentences will necessarily expand the federal prison population and inflate federal spending on incarceration. There is a human cost as well. Instead of providing people who commit low-level drug offenses or who are struggling with mental illness with treatment, support and rehabilitation programs, the policy will subject them to decades of incarceration. In essence, the Attorney General has reinvigorated the failed ‘war on drugs,’ which is why groups ranging from the American Civil Liberties Union to the Cato Institute to Right on Crime have all criticized the newly announced policy.”

“It’s an interesting issue because the attorney general of the United States has no power over local prosecutors, so his directive doesn’t impact my work,” Deschutes County, Ore., District Attorney John Hummel said in an interview. “I thought it was important to tell the people in Deschutes County that this policy doesn’t bind me but I still disagree with it.”

Hummel, who is not affiliated with a political party, said the directive still will have an impact on his community, in that there are people in his jurisdiction who will be charged with federal crimes and prosecuted by the United States Attorney’s Office for the District of Oregon.

“If the United States Attorney for the District of Oregon is now going to be seeking a sentence that is as tough as possible with incarceration as opposed to seeking a sentence that is most likely to result in this person not committing a new crime, well that person is going to be more likely to commit a new crime in Deschutes County when he comes home,” Hummel said. “So this policy is going to make Deschutes County less safe under the guise of ‘tough on crime.’ So when I see that happening, it is relevant to Deschutes County.”

The signers say the purpose of the letter is to make it clear not all those in the justice system share Sessions’ view.

“It’s a national message because all of us signed it. But I wanted to say, ‘Hey, that’s not how we do things in King County,’ ” Daniel Satterberg, prosecuting attorney in King County, Wash., said about the letter. Satterberg said he is now nonpartisan but that he has been elected three times as a Republican. “We consider the facts of the case and the law, and come up with what I think is a pretty thoughtful approximation of justice . . . and it doesn’t always mean seeking the maximum charge and the maximum length of time.”

Racine, D, the attorney general of D.C., said Sessions’ policy is “a return to the nonsensical days of tough-on-crime rhetoric as opposed to evidence-based policy.”

Racine and 14 other attorneys general signed another open letter Thursday, urging Sessions to rescind the order calling for mandatory minimums from federal prosecutors.

“A broad, bipartisan consensus exists that ‘tough-on-crime’ approaches like mandatory minimum sentences for nonviolent, low-level offenses have not made our nation or our cities safer,” they wrote. “Simultaneously, there is strong evidence that contact with the justice system exacerbates the likelihood that a low-level offender will go on to commit more serious crimes. One-size-fits-all sentencing has, at best, a questionable deterrent effect.”

Larry Leiser, president of the National Association of Assistant United States Attorneys, which supports Sessions’ order, said the tough sentencing practice, which was put in place in the 1980s and reaffirmed by U.S. attorneys general several times since, establishes consistency among all federal prosecutors. “Consistency is the hallmark of justice,” Leiser said.

In 2013, then-Attorney General Eric Holder put an end to the longtime approach, saying such penalties should be reserved for “serious, high-level, or violent drug traffickers.”

“So what you have here is Sessions really going back to the long-standing practice of the Department of Justice,” Leiser said. “I think the vast majority of around the country are glad we’re back to the practice that served us so very well for so many years starting in 1981.”

But John Chisholm, D, district attorney in Milwaukee County, Wis., said certain approaches, such as mandatory minimums, did not accomplish what they intended.

“I’m just a firm believer in people using judgment and discretion in every case and that includes judges,” he said. “The approach has not been demonstrated to be particularly effective and I don’t think it enhances public safety – and in some ways, it takes us backwards instead of moving us forward.”

The abject stupidity of returning to mandatory sentences and the "War on Drugs" leaves me breathless with wonder. Really, what I'm wondering is if these cretins have enough intelligence to walk and chew gum...at the same time. sigh
This is so much like the current GOOF-BALL'S we have in the USA cabinet!
What have they done?
Why not go back to the day's of Prohibition!

CAL-EX!
We might have too?
Were not a Theocracy?
Are we?

3,000 year's to go?

Class is not $ it's the way you treat other's!
 
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I am so glad I live in a state that takes care of its citizens. Those strict rules are not going to be applied in our state as well. This will effect a lot of the poor and people of color in other areas.

Some states will fall in line with Sessions. Folks that can't afford to get a good lawyer will be screwed . That's true that the mentally ill will be deeply effect as well. A pretty sad state of affairs IMO. Sessions is as bad as I had feared. His mindset is back in the 80s. Sorry no more politics. I couldn't resist.:smilie-devil:
 

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