Pubdate: Thu, 16 Jun 2011
Source: New York Times (NY)
Copyright: 2011 The New York Times Company
Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ref/membercenter/help/lettertoeditor.html
Website: http://www.nytimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298
Author: Jim Dwyer

SIDE EFFECTS OF ARRESTS FOR MARIJUANA

The Bloomberg administration says that by arresting more than 350,000
people for having small amounts of marijuana since 2002, the police
have helped drive down serious crime -- and that the consequences for
the people locked up have been minimal.

Nearly 90 percent of those arrested on charges of personal possession
of marijuana are black or Latino, although its use by young white
people is rampant in affluent quarters of the city.

Faced with criticism from members of the City Council and the State
Legislature, aides to Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg have emphasized that
few of those arrested on pot charges actually end up with criminal
convictions because most cases are dismissed and sealed after one
year. In effect, they say, the arrest process itself -- which can
stretch for 24 hours or more, under squalid conditions in holding pens
- -- is the extent of the punishment.

Yet there are other, hidden consequences, say lawyers and advocates
who work with those arrested. People regularly lose jobs for missing
work as they wait to see a judge or because their employers do not
want anyone connected with even minor drug offenses on the payroll,
said Marlen Bodden, a staff attorney with the Legal Aid Society.

The case of Alika, 26, a single mother from Brooklyn, shows the
collateral damage, said Ms. Bodden, who represented her. She asked
that Alika's last name not be published because of concerns about
future jobs.

One Saturday afternoon in February, Alika, who lives in the Marcus
Garvey Houses, was stopped by two police officers as she walked across
the development. They asked for identification.

"Then they asked me do I have anything else on me, like a gun or a
knife," Alika said on Thursday. "I told them I had a bag of marijuana
in my purse. They said, 'Let's see it.' If I didn't show it to them,
they were going bring a lady cop to search me. If she found anything,
they were going to send me direct to booking and spend the night."

She removed the marijuana from her purse, an act that transformed it
from a violation -- which is like a traffic ticket -- into a misdemeanor
for the crime of openly displaying it. She was handcuffed. Eight hours
later, she was released. At the end of March, a judge said the charges
would be dropped if she stayed out of trouble for a year.

A week later, she was hit with a penalty that did not involve jail:
she was fired by her employer, the New York City Housing Authority.
She had been paid $12 an hour as a janitor.

On average last year, someone was arrested every 10 minutes in New
York City for possessing a few pinches of marijuana -- less than 25
grams -- and no other crime. More arrests, 50,383, were made in 2010 on
this charge than on any other, and arrests are being made at an even
faster pace this year. "They're clogging the courts and ruining
people's lives, in terms of potential collateral consequences for
housing, employment, immigration," said Steven Banks, the attorney in
chief of the Legal Aid Society, which represented 30,000 people in
minor marijuana cases last year.

An aide to Mr. Bloomberg, Frank Barry, said that state law did not
permit employers to ask about old arrests.

IMMIGRANTS are deported if they are convicted twice on marijuana
charges, said Donna Lieberman, the executive director of the New York
Civil Liberties Union.

Ms. Bodden of Legal Aid said many of her clients were home health care
attendants or security guards for state or city agencies; the agencies
are notified when an employee is arrested. This puts their licenses at
risk, she said.

Courts usually handle the marijuana arrests with a form of probation
known as "adjournment in contemplation of dismissal"; records are
sealed if the person stays out of trouble for a year.

Whether the consequences of arrests for marijuana are dire or simply a
hassle, why are they visited almost entirely on nonwhite
neighborhoods? Mr. Barry said that the city's focus on quality-of-life
issues in high crime areas had "saved thousands of lives, and the
gains have been biggest in African-American and Latino
communities."

Testing often showed marijuana in the urine of people arrested in New
York City, he said: "The data shows an inextricable link between drugs
and crime, and marijuana is the most prevalent drug used by criminals."

Wouldn't those same urine tests, conducted not in jails but in
better-off neighborhoods, show "inextricable" links between pot and
banking -- or the law or academia? Or even politics.
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MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.