Cuomo Still Wants to Curtail Bogus Pot Busts
In addition to frivolous new gun restrictions, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo yesterday recommended legislation that would accomplish something worthwhile and long overdue, reining in police officers who defy state law by arresting pot smokers caught with small amounts of marijuana. "It's not fair," Cuomo said in his State of the State speech. "It's not right. It must end, and it must end now."
As Cuomo explained, the state legislature decriminalized possession of up to 25 grams in 1977, making it a violation punishable by a $100 fine. But possessing marijuana "in public view" remained a misdemeanor, punishable by up to three months in jail. Police in New York City routinely convert the former offense into the latter, justifying arrests by instructing people they stop to reveal any contraband they may be carrying or by removing it themselves in the course of a pat-down. Although New York Police Commissioner Ray Kelly concedes this practice is illegal, court records and reports from defense attorneys show that it continues, which is why Cuomo last year endorsed abolishing the distinction between mere possession and public display. Yesterday Cuomo reiterated his support for that reform, which was blocked last year due to opposition by Republican legislators.
Cuomo noted that arrests for public display of marijuana have skyrocketed during the last few decades:
In the first full year of enforcement of the separate "open view" marijuana law, there were 514 arrests for the crime. Today, police arrest 100 times more people for this offense, and these arrests comprise the single largest category of arrests in New York City, accounting for 15 percent of all NYC arrests and 20 percent of NYC misdemeanors.
A table included in Cuomo's prepared remarks shows the number of such arrests has increased especially rapidly since the mid-1990s, rising from 4,310 statewide in 1994 to 53,124 last year. New York City accounted for 94 percent of those pot busts in 2011. More than four-fifths of the arrestees were black or Hispanic, even though survey data indicate that whites are at least as likely to smoke pot. Last year 72 percent of the people arrested on this charge had no prior criminal record. And even though only about 10 percent of these cases end with a conviction, Cuomo noted, that doesn't mean they are no big deal:
Arrest has consequences that persist after release. There is the humiliation of arrest and, in some cases, detention during processing. More enduring is the stigma of the criminal records that can have lasting and deleterious effects on the young person's future. A "drug" arrest can have a significant impact on a person's life and key decisions made by employers, landlords, licensing boards and banks.
This situation clearly is not what the legislature had in mind back in 1977, when it declared:
Arrests, criminal prosecutions, and criminal penalties are inappropriate for people who possess small quantities of marihuana for personal use. Every year, this process needlessly scars thousands of lives and wastes millions of dollars in law enforcement resources, while detracting from the prosecution of serious crime.
Cuomo's proposal is to treat possession of up to 15 grams "in public view" the same as concealed possession of up to 25 grams. The lower limit looks like an attempt to allay the anxieties of drug warriors like Senate Majority Leader Dean Skelos, a Long Island Republican who last year warned that decriminalizing public display would allow people to "just walk around with 10 joints in each ear." If only Republicans were as eager to follow Cuomo's lead on this issue as they are to go along with his dubious gun control agenda.
[I have corrected the time-warped reference to Cuomo's father.]
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And replace them with bogus gun busts.
Damn, you were all over that.
Exactly. Fuck you to hell, Cuomo.
Mario?
Polo.
, which was blocked last year due to opposition by Republican legislators.
In addition, Republicans are considering re-running Romney in 2016 against the Biden/Clinton ticket, with the campaign slogan, "This time we're serious!"
Number one issue: Baggie pants.
They're NY Rockafeller Republicans. Fiscally liberal, socially conservative, totally worthless.
he lower limit looks like an attempt to allay the anxieties of drug warriors like Senate Majority Leader Dean Skelos, a Long Island Republican who last year warned that decriminalizing public display would allow people to "just walk around with 10 joints in each ear."
And that is something anyone should care about why?
I have a hard time believing someone can become that dumb naturally. There must be some explaination for it.
It is like he is some kind of professional in the art of stupid. He is to ordinary stupid people what Tiger Woods is to the average golfer.
Black?
No average golfers are black? Try again.
I live behind a golf course, I've never seen one. Let's put it this way, they're as rare as Arthur Ashe in the Tennis club.
Regardless, you missed the point.
Regardless, you missed the point.
No, I got the point, you missed the joke.
No, a man-whore.
No self-respecting black man... no, wait, what the fuck... no self-respecting white man...
I live in NY. I'll write letters to the scumbags that be to try to get Republicans to agree on the relaxed MJ laws in favor of not going all out on gun legislation. Sadly, I expect the gun regs and no movement on the MJ relaxation.
If there is one thing more worthless than a New York Democrat, it is a New York Republican.
The lower limit looks like an attempt to allay the anxieties of drug warriors like Senate Majority Leader Dean Skelos, a Long Island Republican who last year warned that decriminalizing public display would allow people to "just walk around with 10 joints in each ear."
A friend of mine works with an elderly couple and the husband had this weird disorder, a type of cancer she said, that causes the bones to spontaneously snap, sometimes in the middle of the night while the sufferer is sleeping.
While I don't wish this disease on Senate Majority Leader Dean Skelos, I'm not actively hoping he won't get it.
Jesus! You mean boneitis is real?!?
Given that the city's police commissioner has admitted the practice is illegal, what I want to know is why NYC hasn't been blasted into oblivion with 42 USC 1983 lawsuits at this point.
Sovreign immunity? Fuck you, that's why? ACLU is too concerned about parents possibly maybe choosing a school with religious affiliations? OMG GUNZ!
One of the reasons why I can't stand the show Blue Bloods anymore is because the willing suspension of disbelief is just not possible when the show pretends the NYPD commissioner and his staff are decent human beings instead of the leaders of an organization that is a sociopathic hive of scum and villainy.
jesus. just amazing
That anyone would take a show like blue bloods seriously when New York police routinely and knowingly break the law by "converting" non arrestable possession offenses into arrestable public display offenses?
I have to agree.
Lets kick it on up a notch dude.
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over and join the high conversations! We're quite new, but VERY welcoming.
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Looking at that picture, am I the only one who doesn't like foregrips on rifles?