NYC Prosecutors Drop 3,000 Weed Cases
New York State as a whole seems to be moving toward legalization.

Citing "racial disparities" in enforcement, Manhattan District Attorney Cy Vance has dropped more than 3,000 low-level marijuana cases, many of which were decades old.
"By dismissing these cases, we're removing all of the collateral consequences—for one's job prospects, school attendance, housing applications and immigration status—associated with an open criminal court case," Vance told New York City Criminal Court Judge Kevin McGrath today.
Vance asked McGrath to vacate a total of 3,042 cases, some of them dating back to 1978. According to the DA, nearly 80 percent of the cases dropped involved people of color. "We're taking one small step toward addressing the decades of racial disparities behind the enforcement of marijuana in New York City," he said in court.
As a result, those accused of possessing or using small amounts of marijuana who didn't appear for their court date now won't have to. Alleged violent offenders and weed dealers, as well as those found in possession of large amounts of marijuana, aren't off the hook.
McGrath is sealing the misdemeanors for 90 days, thus giving the district attorney's office enough time to file the correct paperwork to permanently dismiss the charges.
Vance says not only is this the right thing to do, it will also help unclog the courts and his own office. "We have to actually look at what resources we have, what resources the court has," he said.
Though Vance only prosecutes cases in Manhattan, the state as a whole seems to be moving toward legalization of marijuana for recreational use. In a July report, for instance, the New York Department of Health (DOH) recommended legalizing weed. Health officials insisted that the benefits of a "regulated marijuana market" would "outweigh the potential negative impacts," citing economic advantages and the effect legalization would have on the criminal justice system. In 2017, 86 percent of those busted for "marijuana possession in the fifth degree" in the state were "people of color."
Less than a month later, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo put together a "workgroup" to draft legislation based on the DOH report.
In New York City alone, authorities are easing up on enforcement. Starting this month, the New York Police Department will no longer arrest people for smoking weed in public. Most offenders are now given a summons instead.
And in addition to Vance's move to dismiss low-level marijuana cases, Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez announced a plan last week to erase up to 20,000 convictions. In both Brooklyn and Manhattan, prosecutors now decline to press charges in most of these cases.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
End the entire war on drugs.
I would like to buy LSD or MDA.
b. easy despite a.?
Dill - your teen lingo I don't understand?
I'l like to go into a store, call it the "Drug Store," and ask 'what kind of MDA do you have? '
ah. tardis to 1985 better plan ... were fun days
If I had a TARDIS I could think of some more I tereting places than that to go. Like Hawaiiin the late 70's, where a certain Kenyan high school student would be getting a felony charge for dealing coke, this saving the world endless misery in the 21st century
There sure is a lot of Lucy flying around here today.
After what I went through evicting methhead assholes for a rental house recently, I'm not too charitable towards meth, or it's users.
Who's asking for your charity? Plus, assholes are assholes. Maybe the meth had nothing to do with it. Besides, if more drugs were legal, they would be much more manageable due to dosage control, purity, socialization, etc.
Not to say there are no possible downsides to drug decrim/legalization, but we have poor outcomes with prohibition. Why not try something new?
They should have announced this on April 20.
good start, new york.
Those who haven't died from choke holds anyway.
Decades old cases? Typical efficiency.
Yeah, what's with this about *pending* cases from 1978?
Are we talking about old *convictions* getting expunged? If not, what's going on here?
Excuse me, did you actually think the right to a speedy trial meant something?
10 Years in Jail, but Still Awaiting Trial
At least he can get credit for time served.
/sarc
So let me get the this straight. the problem isn't that they were arresting thousands of people for stupid drug crimes, the problem is that they weren't arresting the right KIND of people for stupid crimes. Got it.
Thanks for sharing this article. I will visit your blog regularly for some latest post.
pokercapsa