Pubdate: Fri, 14 Feb 2020 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: Christine Mai-Duc and Dan Frosch L.A. TO DISMISS 66,000 POT CASES Largest such move in California comes amid nationwide push for criminal-justice reform and relaxing drug laws Los Angeles County will vacate nearly 66,000 marijuana convictions dating back to the 1960s, part of a growing national effort to reduce drug convictions. The move, announced Thursday by Los Angeles County District Attorney Jackie Lacey, will dismiss convictions for tens of thousands of individuals, the majority of whom are black or Latino. "As a result of our actions, these convictions should no longer burden those who have struggled to find a job or a place to live because of their criminal record," Ms. Lacey said in a press conference Thursday. She said she believed it is the largest mass dismissal of cannabis cases to date in California. Of the cases, about 62,000 were felony convictions that prosecutors asked a Los Angeles Superior Court to dismiss this week. Another 3,700 were misdemeanor possession charges stemming from 10 L.A. County cities. California voters legalized recreational marijuana use in 2016 with a ballot measure that also made individuals previously convicted of growing, possessing, selling or transporting marijuana eligible for reduced sentences. But the process for seeking relief from courts has been criticized by advocates as onerous and so far only about 3% of those eligible statewide have received it, according to nonprofit group Code for America. A state law signed by former Gov. Jerry Brown in 2018 required the California Department of Justice to compile a database of individuals who may be eligible to have their old marijuana pot cases reviewed-a number the department estimates to be about 190,000 individuals. Under the law, counties are also required to review those cases by July of this year, though not necessarily to dismiss any. Ms. Lacey, who runs the country's largest district attorney's office, had previously said her team wouldn't automatically clear drug convictions. In a statement after Proposition 64's passage, Ms. Lacey encouraged those affected to petition the courts "rather than wait for my office to go through tens of thousands of case files." But the process has moved more quickly since her office began working with Code for America, which developed software that identifies people who may be eligible to have past convictions overturned in states where marijuana is now legal or will be legal. For more than a year, the group has worked with five California counties-Los Angeles, San Francisco, Sacramento, San Joaquin and Contra Costa-as part of a pilot program to review old pot cases. In 2019, then San Francisco District Attorney George Gascon said his office cleared 8,132 marijuana-related convictions as a result of the pilot program. Last month, Contra Costa County District Attorney Diana Becton said that her office would dismiss 3,264 marijuana convictions. The L.A. County cases that were overturned resulted in approximately 53,000 people being cleared. Of those, 32% are African-American, 20% are white, 45% are Latino and 3% are other or unknown, Ms. Lacey and Code for America said. With the pilot program done, Code for America has made its software available to all of California's 58 counties. The group is also teaming up with the top prosecutor in Cook County, Illinois, which includes Chicago, to review old marijuana convictions there. Ms. Lacey is running for re-election in a race in which her leading opponent is Mr. Gascon, who left his San Francisco office last year. He has said that she is not active enough on criminal-justice reform, a key plank of his campaign. A spokesman for Ms. Lacey's campaign said that Ms. Lacey began the program that led to Thursday's dismissals last April. "The facts and the timeline show that this decision was based on seeking justice for all, not politics," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt