Indianapolis' Top Prosecutor Says He'll Stop Charging Simple Marijuana Possession
Marion County, Indiana, joins a growing list of jurisdictions where prosecutors are refusing to file charges for petty marijuana offenses.

Indianapolis' top prosecutor announced Monday that his office will no longer file charges for possession of under an ounce of marijuana.
The policy change by Ryan Mears, Marion County's temporary prosecutor, is the latest move by a big-city district attorney to rein in marijuana prosecutions. Mears also joins a growing list of prosecutors who are beginning to acknowledge the drug war's costly drain on police and court resources.
The Indianapolis Star reports:
Mears announced Monday that his office will no longer prosecute certain marijuana possession offenses in Marion County. If a person possesses less than one ounce of marijuana, that person will not face formal charges from the prosecutor's office, effective immediately. The policy is aimed at diverting resources to violent crimes, such as murder and sexual assault.
It's a surprising, sweeping change. But Mears wouldn't call it bold.
"I don't think doing the right thing is a bold thing to do," he told IndyStar. "I've been a prosecutor for 12 years, I have the experience of seeing what causes violent crime. And over the course of 12 years, I can tell you, small amounts of marijuana is not our problem."
Top prosecutors in other major cities have issued similar policies. In Baltimore, State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby announced in January that the city would no longer prosecute any cases of marijuana possession.
In Texas, recently elected Bexar County District Attorney Joe Gonzales, whose jurisdiction includes San Antonio, announced in May that his office will no longer prosecute possession of trace amounts of narcotics such as heroin, cocaine, and methamphetamines, and that it would start a "cite and release" policy for marijuana possession of under an ounce. John Creuzot, Dallas County's district attorney, announced in April that his office would not prosecute first-time marijuana offenses or trace amounts of drugs under .01 grams.
Last year, shortly after taking office, Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner dropped all marijuana prosecutions and ordered his attorneys to decline drug paraphernalia prosecutions.
Of course, not all of these prosecutors' colleagues in law enforcement are happy about these developments.
"It seems to me a curious strategy to put out a welcome mat for lawbreakers in a community already facing challenges related to crime, homelessness and other social problems stemming from drug abuse," Curtis Hill, Indiana's attorney general, said about Mears' new policy in a statement to the Star.
Last year, Indianapolis police had a 43 percent clearance rate for murders.
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The trace amounts change is surprising. I would have thought that would be the case anyway, just as you don't pass out speeding tickets for .01 mph over a limit. I have heard second- and third-hand stories of tickets for 1mph over the limit, but never from anyone who actually got such a ticket.
Speed cameras don't even nail you until you're doing about 10 miles over (usually).
I've been told that cops in this area won't give tickets for less than 15 over. I haven't tested that theory 🙂 but it wouldn't surprise me.
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This sounds like a good idea, since in the article I didn't see anything about ignoring burglaries or "minor" assaults, etc., as happened in some of these jurisdictions.
OMG!
Freedom breaking out in the Union of Soviet Socialist Slave States of America?
What next?
Due process?
This was a big story on the local news last week.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-49849722
Notice the headline doesn't say "allegedly." It just says that it happened.
Woops.
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/immanuel-christian-school-amari-allen-boys-accused-pinning-down-black-girl-cutting-her-dreadlocks-2019-09-28/
Ha-- yep-- Matt & Blonde had this as hoax hate on Sunday.
You racist, how can you believe the so-called recantation of an admitted liar?
Glad to see some sensibility on this. Of course, new prosecutor, new leniency threshold... wake me when it is law.
Prosecutors write their own laws nowadays.
This guy is temporary, he's filling in because the prostate got prosecutor cancer.
I might have this backwards but it seems right to me.
Three years before the 1972 LP platform was published, a matchbox full of twigs and seeds--even hemp roots--was good for a 5-year prison term if you were 18. Forty-seven years after our Hospers-Nathan ticket wrote the Roe v Wade decision with only 4000 votes, the LP swings 4 MILLION presidential votes and looter politicians scramble to stop shooting our kids over plant leaves. Remember this next time some smarmy slimeball tries to convince you to waste your leveraged LP spoiler vote on looter kleptocracy candidates!
never stop being weird, LP
"less than an ounce".
So, basically, the bag your dime comes in will still put you over the limit.
This certainly is the right thing to do but shouldn't a prosecutor be following the laws of his jurisdiction? Not that any of them do,they are the biggest lawbreakers in many a courtroom.
Curtis Hill is living proof of the Peter principle.
Fucked up as this country has become wouldn’t make a difference either way.
They still steal your buds though.
So, some lame assed cop gets your smoke and you don't get a ticket. Still highway robbery.
When the law of the land is highway robbery and then kidnapping, a highly placed robber downgrading it to just the taking is still progress.
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