California Prosecutors Move to Clear Old Pot Convictions
Recreational weed went into effect last year. Now, two prosecutors are trying to bring the criminal justice system up to speed.

The medicinal use of marijuana has been legal in California for over 20 years. Last year, the Golden State legalized recreational use. Yet a great many state residents still have marijuana-related convictions on their records. On Monday, two prosecutors announced a new effort to clear tens of thousands of those weed-related convictions.
Statements from District Attorney Jackie Lacey of Los Angeles County and District Attorney Tori Verber Salazar of San Joaquin County announced that the counties were teaming up with Code for America to automatically dismiss or reduce 54,000 weed-related convictions. The initiative would seek to harmonize the criminal justice system with the new legalization rules.
The initiative would make use of Code for America's Clear My Record program. The program takes criminal records, determines eligibility for relief, and then completes the necessary forms which are then filed in court. This helps governments like L.A. and San Joaquin County process applications more quickly. The program creators, who launched their pilot program in California last year, hope to expand the model nationwide.
Record-clearing on this level will be especially beneficial for black Californians. L.A. County Board Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas said that the drug war "led to decades-long racial disparities in cannabis-related arrests and convictions." A 2016 study found that while only 6 percent of the state's population, black Californians make up nearly a quarter of inmates serving time solely for weed-related offenses in the state.
Harsher drug penalties throughout the country have contributed to the rapid growth of the prison population. States that adopted early legalization measures failed to include provisions for those incarcerated under old rules. Washington state, for example, did not announce clemency measures until last year. States that are currently taking up legalization are making sure to add provisions to forgive old drug convictions in proposed bills.
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Can we convict Kamala Harris just so we can clear her?
You can't convict such a queen of intersectionality.
She's a she, she's a semi-negress, she's a mulatta, she's semi dot Indian, she's Afro-Caribe, she's married to a Jew, and she was the mistress of a very progressive negro politician.
And a prosecutor, so she can eat shit and die. I'd certainly vote for a defense attorney.
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Record-clearing on this level will be especially beneficial for black Californians
, especially Kamala Harris.
Still waiting for all those bookmaking convictions to be expunged by the states that have legalized sports betting.
I have no issue with the idea that the WOD has been disproportionately hard on black Americans. But it is an effect, not a cause. The cause (or at least one of them) is the militarization of the police, in addition to the ridiculous numbers of officers there are, yet they can't be bothered to even come out to the scene if someone breaks into your car or garage.
Hey! Some prosecutors worked really hard to get those easy convictions on their resumes.
Trudat. Would you accept one year of probation or risk 7 years hard time if it went to a jury?
>>>Record-clearing on this level will be especially beneficial for black Californians.
don't care who it helps politically. should be done by close of business today.
When will there be reparations for those wronged by the immoral War on Weed?
To paraphrase Inigo Montoya: "You know, California, you finally did something right."
"Now prepare to die"
LOL
Huh. Was not marijuana illegal at the time these people were sentenced?
But, I agree: that convictions should be voided, but not because the law was changed, but because the WOD has been unconstitutional from the beginning.
+1 brain
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