Pubdate: Wed, 08 Apr 2015
Source: Concord Monitor (NH)
Copyright: 2015 Monitor Publishing Company
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/WbpFSdHB
Website: http://www.concordmonitor.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/767
Author: Casey McDermott

LAW ENFORCEMENT AGAINST PROHIBITION WEIGHS IN ON NEW HAMPSHIRE
MARIJUANA DECRIMINALIZATION

As the Senate takes up the latest attempt to decriminalize marijuana 
in New Hampshire, proponents brought in a new ally to lend a voice to 
their cause: the head of a national coalition of law enforcement 
officials advocating for drug policy reform.

"Decriminalizing marijuana possession by passing HB 618 is a 
necessary step in the right direction," Neill Franklin, executive 
director of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, wrote in a recent 
letter to the Senate Judiciary Committee. "The less time that we as 
law enforcement spend arresting and prosecuting marijuana users, the 
more time we can spend keeping our streets safe from violent crime. 
LEAP strongly supports decriminalizing marijuana to free up limited 
police resources to deal with more serious crimes."

Franklin, who spent more than 30 years working with the Baltimore 
Police Department and the Maryland State Police before joining LEAP, 
spoke alongside a group of New Hampshire-based decriminalization 
advocates at a press conference ahead of a Senate hearing on the 
decriminalization bill yesterday morning.

When he talks about marijuana policy, he tries to take a pragmatic 
approach: The money and hours currently invested in cracking down on 
marijuana possession, Franklin said, are simply not a smart 
investment when they could instead be directed to more violent crimes.

"I get the emotional position here," Franklin said. "But when I 
started having conversations about the data, about the numbers, about 
the amount of people we were arresting and what happens from a simple 
arrest when it comes to the future of those people we arrest for 
simple drug possession, the punishment does not fit the crime."

In March, the House overwhelmingly   297-67   approved a modified 
version of a decriminalization bill that had been introduced earlier 
this year. While the original version of the bill proposed reducing 
penalties to a $100 fine upon first-time offenders who are caught 
with up to 1 ounce of marijuana, the amended version changes the 
threshold to those who have up to half an ounce.

Now, the bill is up for review in the Senate. While the House has 
introduced at least nine decriminalization measures in the last 
decade, none of those policies has ever managed to pass the opposite chamber.

And even if the policy does earn the support of state senators this 
time around, it is likely to run into opposition from Gov. Maggie 
Hassan, who has said she opposes this specific decriminalization 
policy. Her spokesman, William Hinkle, said in a statement that the 
governor "does believe that there are other avenues that can and 
should be looked at to encourage alternative sentencing options that 
will focus on treatment first" and "does not believe a person should 
be jailed for a first-time marijuana possession offense."

Franklin, for his part, said he's surprised that the state wasn't 
ahead of the curve on decriminalization.

"I'm telling you, I thought New Hampshire would be one of the states 
leading this issue," the law enforcement veteran said yesterday, 
adding with a laugh: "I'm still trying to figure out what that quote 
on your license plate means."

"As long as you are not preying upon other people, as long as you are 
not hurting or victimizing other people, enjoy your life, enjoy your 
freedoms," Franklin continued. "That's what I thought New Hampshire was about."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom