Seattle Voids Criminal Records for Pot Convictions, Giving People a Second Chance

in #busy6 years ago

By Matt Agorist

 All too often, homeless or otherwise unemployed people are accused of  being lazy or complacent because they do not have a job. However, many  of those people don’t have jobs because—thanks to the government’s war  on drugs—they’ve become unemployable. 

Because of a massive and  successful backlash against a portion of the war on drugs, however, many  of these folks are now getting a second chance. It is no secret that a marijuana conviction is a blow to individual  freedom—even if you were lucky enough not to go to jail or have already  gotten out. A drug conviction limits the ability for people to get a  job, borrow money, or even find a place to live. 

This attack on freedom  then leads to a function known as recidivism which limits an individual’s choices thereby fostering an environment which will lead to that person ending up back in jail. The city of Seattle is taking action to help those whose lives have  been thrown off track after getting caught by police with a plant.  Officials have filed a motion in municipal court that will  vacate—retroactively void—all misdemeanor marijuana convictions in the  city. 

As Fortune Magazine reports,  according to a statement from Mayor Jenny Durkan, the request would  effect 542 people. The city has also requested the dismissal of  outstanding misdemeanor possession charges. In her statement, Durkan acknowledged the lives ruined by the drug war and went so far as to call this move an “important step to right the wrongs [of] the failed war on drugs.” 

Durkan explained how the war on drugs disproportionately effects  people of color, who have been far more aggressively convicted for drug  crimes than their white counterparts. City Attorney Pete Holmes also acknowledged the racial disparity. “As we see marijuana sold in retail storefronts today, people who  simply had a joint in their pocket a decade ago still have a red mark on  their records,” Holmes said in a statement.  

It’s long past time we remedy the drug policies of yesteryear, and  this is one small step to right the injustices of a drug war that has  primarily targeted people of color. I’m hopeful the court will choose to  clear these charges. It seems that politicians are finally starting to get the point that former Congressman Ron Paul has been saying for decades. 

[Black peope] are tried and imprisoned  disproportionately. They suffer the consequence of the death penalty  disproportionately. Rich white people don’t get the death penalty very  often. And most of these are victimless crimes. Sometimes people can use  drugs and get arrested three times and never committed a violent act  and they can go to prison for life. I think there’s discrimination in  the system, but you have to address the drug war. I would say the  judicial system is probably one of the worst places where prejudice and  discrimination still exists in this country.

As TFTP reported in December, other states who’ve recently legalized  marijuana are making similar moves to right the wrongs perpetuated by  decades of the failed war on drugs. Thousands of Californians are getting second chances  as politicians seek to undo the damage their policy of kidnapping and  caging people for using a plant has caused over the years. 

“We want to address the wrongs that were caused by the failures of  the war on drugs for many years in this country and begin to fix the  harm that was done not only to the entire nation but specifically to  communities of color,” San Francisco District Attorney George Gascon  said in February. 

Also, as the National Conference of State Legislatures noted,  “at least nine states have passed laws addressing expungement of  certain marijuana convictions,” and in most of these  states, “expungement measures pair with other policies to decriminalize  or legalize.” 

It seems that the war on drugs has finally begun to unravel,  Politicians, desperate to end up on the right side of history are now  making the right moves to remedy some of the problems. Unfortunately,  however, as Jeff Sessions’ career illustrates, there are still plenty of  dinosaurs in suits willing cage people for a plant. So, as we keep  winning these battles, it is important to stay on point—because the war  is still far from over. 


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I hope this starts a trend of voiding non-violent victimless crimes

Great news and great read!

This is great news! I'm surprised it's only 542 people though.

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