Pubdate: Wed, 23 Jun 2010 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Copyright: 2010 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/IuiAC7IZ Website: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/82 Author: William Lee, Tribune reporter Cited: Sheriff Tom Dart http://www.cookcountysheriff.org/ Cited: Illinois NORML http://www.illinoisNORML.org Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?261 (Cannabis - United States) MARIJUANA LAW ON BOOKS BUT NEVER IMPLEMENTED Marijuana law on books but never implemented Sheriff's office continues to arrest, rather than ticket, minor offenders Nearly a year after the Cook County Board passed a controversial ordinance allowing sheriff's police to ticket pot smokers for minor possession instead of arresting them, police have yet to issue a single ticket. County commissioners made headlines last July when they quietly passed the ordinance that gave officers the choice to either arrest people in unincorporated areas possessing 10 grams or less of marijuana, or to hand out tickets for $200 within the county's unincorporated areas. The ordinance was the idea of Commissioner Earlean Collins, who said she was spurred by the arrest of her grandson for possessing "half a joint." Sheriff Tom Dart, who says he was never consulted before the measure was passed, has long been skeptical of the ordinance's impact. With Dart's office making only about a dozen or so arrests each year -- and none made so far this year -- his office says the ordinance won't alleviate the county's overworked court system or act as a cash cow, two points made by Collins and other supporters of the ordinance. Get the Chicago Tribune delivered to your home for only $1 a week) "Writing tickets to maybe 10 (or) 12 people a year won't bring in the types of revenues I think some are expecting," said Steve Patterson, a spokesman for Dart. "And it certainly won't unclog our courts system, as has been contended." The ordinance, which was championed by legalization supporters, first hit a snag after a county board committee rejected a request by Dart to extend the ticket-writing power to wherever sheriff's officers patrol. This would have included south suburban Ford Heights, which Dart's office patrols because the village doesn't have its own police force. Without the change, Dart's office says that a pot user in Ford Heights must be arrested, while another user across the street in an unincorporated area could merely get a ticket. "The issue is that it sets up two sets of laws for our officers to enforce. That's a problem," Patterson said. Board members say there's nothing stopping Dart's officers from enforcing the new law. But Dart has vowed not to enforce the law unless the board tailors the ordinance. "We do not plan to write tickets in one place and arrest people in another. Unless it's uniform, we will act as we always have, which is arrest. The ordinance gives us the discretion to choose. So we'll choose to continue acting as we always have," Patterson said. The latest marijuana-related roadblock comes at a time when cities across the country are discussing allowing the use of medicinal marijuana, and, as California is contemplating, total decriminalization and taxation of marijuana. Legalization advocates support Cook County's measure, though they and civil libertarians have concerns that police discretion could lead to racial profiling. Dan Linn, executive director of the state chapter of the National Organization to Reform Marijuana Laws was optimistic that the county's ordinance would be a gateway for Chicago's long-stalled proposal to ticket small-time pot users, but he viewed the discretion aspect as its fatal flaw. "I think it was well-intentioned, but it could have been done better politically, so you don't have these open-to-interpretation arrests. I think writing a ticket instead of arrests is a much better option," Linn said. While not taking a stance on legalization, Ed Yohnka, spokesman for the local American Civil Liberties Union, agreed that discretion could disproportionately affect young men of color. Yohnka pointed out several studies that showed minorities are generally arrested and serve more jail time for marijuana possession, though they use it at the same levels as whites. In New York, for example, a study showed that that 87 percent of the city's marijuana arrests were of African-Americans and Latinos. "Every stop along the way, there are concerns about discretion and the way it is used. It's not an unjust concern," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake