Pubdate: Mon, 28 May 2012 Source: Daily Journal, The (Vineland, NJ) Copyright: 2012 Daily Journal Contact: http://www.thedailyjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2250 Author: Michael Symons Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?233 (Law Enforcement Against Prohibition) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?227 (Cole, Jack) N.J. EASES UP ON 'WAR ON DRUGS' TRENTON - Drug-free school zones were shrunk. Marijuana was legalized for medicinal purposes, though still isn't available yet. And now lawmakers are mulling whether to make the penalties for possessing a small amount of pot - enough to roll around 30 joints - akin to a parking ticket. A quarter-century after New Jersey stepped up its "war on drugs" and swelled its prison system though mandatory-minimum sentences, the state clearly is moving in the opposite direction - though advocates for the changes insist they don't want drugs legalized, only punished more moderately. "Currently there is a network of penalties in place that really are designed to ruin people's lives," said attorney Rachel Cotroni, a board member at NORML NJ. "We're not saying legalize it. We're saying let's put together a framework of penalties that are reasonable and create a punishment that fits the crime." Frank Fulbrook, an activist from Camden, says: "We need to move to a more sensible approach of not 'tough on crime' vs. 'soft on crime,' but 'smart on crime' vs. 'stupid on crime.' I would argue every prohibition law in American history is an example of being stupid on crime." State spending on the Department of Corrections exceeds $1 billion annually, although it actually has declined slightly for the last two years. Long-term spending growth has tapered off, up by less than 16 percent over the past 10 years after having increased by more than 46 percent in the decade before that. The surge, as well as the leveling off, is reflected in patterns in the size of the prison population - driven mostly, though not exclusively, by people locked up for drug crimes. In the mid-'80s, New Jersey adopted the "Comprehensive Drug Reform Act of 1986," imposing mandatory minimum sentences for manufacturing, distributing, dispensing or possessing controlled dangerous substances. A year later, the state adopted a law designating the area within 1,000 feet of a school a drug-free zone with mandatory minimum prison terms. Between then and 1998, the inmate population of convicted drug offenders increased by an average of more than 17 percent annually. Not only were more drug offenders being sent to prison, but their stays were made longer. Drug offenders accounted for 10 percent of the prison population in 1987, just after the drug laws were changed. That grew quickly to 30 percent within four years, as the number of people locked up for drug crimes grew from around 1,360 at the start of 1987 to more than 5,100 at the start of 1991. It then doubled to around 10,400 by early 1999, peaking at 36 percent of the state's prison population in 2002 - when it began to decline as inmates started to reach the end of their mandatory-minimum terms. Since 1999, the number of inmates for whom a drug charge is their most serious offense has dropped by half. Most of that decline has occurred since 2007. In the past five years, the number of drug-related inmates is down by more than 5,200, which exceeds the 3,500 drop in the overall prison population. 'It's crazy' Jack Cole, a retired New Jersey State Police detective lieutenant who is now chairman of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, said the emphasis on drugs can be traced to 1970, when President Richard Nixon got Congress to begin funding a "war on drugs." He said New Jersey got so much federal funding that the state police's seven-man narcotics unit was expanded within two weeks to a 76-person bureau, in which he worked undercover. That funding came with an expectation that drug cases also would rise exponentially. Cole laughed at the idea that changes like those occurring in New Jersey suggest the war on drugs is ending. "Oh, good Lord, no. It's nowhere near over," Cole said. He noted $1.5 trillion has been spent over four decades and 46 million arrests made of nonviolent drug offenders - and that after all that, the same percentage of the population, 1.3 percent, is addicted to drugs as was in 1914 and 1970. Even more concerning is that police solve far fewer major crimes now than ever before, he said. "And yet here we are chasing around a bunch of nonviolent marijuana offenders. It's nuts. It's crazy," Cole said. "And New Jersey is worse that national statistics. Nationally, police solved 61 percent of the murders in 2009, but in New Jersey they only solved 53 percent of the murders." Statistics aren't available for the number of people locked up specifically for marijuana. But Roseanne Scotti of the Drug Policy Alliance, which supports more lenient drug laws, said last week that roughly 22,000 people a year are arrested in New Jersey for marijuana possession. She said civil fines, rather than criminal penalties, would be more appropriate - and save taxpayer money. "Every time someone's currently arrested for what is the equivalent of a few sugar packets of marijuana, you have a police officer who has to be taken off the street to bring the person in to process them," Scotti said. "It takes up the time of court. The person has to either hire a defense attorney or have an attorney paid for by the state of New Jersey, a public defender to defend them." Assemblyman Reed Gusciora, D-Mercer, said: "The real crime is to taxpayers. It's really costly for taxpayers to prosecute that one joint when limited resources would be better served on bigger and better crimes." Contrary stance A plan to eliminate criminal penalties for possession of less than a half-ounce of marijuana appears likely to be approved next month by the Assembly. The legislative body was prepared to endorse the change last week, but instead altered the plan to steer some of the money from the new fines into drug-related education programs that try to ward off abuse of prescription and illegal drugs. Not everyone supports the change. Bruce Hummer of the New Jersey Prevention Network, a public health agency based in Lakewood representing professionals that seek to prevent substance abuse, said the idea encourages marijuana use by signaling the government says it's not harmful. "Research and evidence has shown this increasingly lenient view of marijuana will be devastating to our youth," said Hummer, who noted 15 grams of marijuana, which would be the amount subject to fines rather than criminal prosecution, isn't a small amount. The state Senate's version of the plan would apply to even larger amounts of marijuana than the Assembly envisions. It's unclear whether either plan would be approved by Gov. Chris Christie, who last week said he is inclined not to support the concept. Still, the bill was approved unanimously by an Assembly committee, has support from both ends of the political spectrum and could garner enough backing to override a potential veto: * "The time has come to really decriminalize small amounts of marijuana," said Assemblyman Peter Barnes III, D-Middlesex. "I come from a law enforcement family. My father was in the FBI for 28 years. My brother's a prosecutor. Some people have questioned why I decided to be a sponsor of the bill. I think the reason is the criminal bills for small amounts of marijuana don't make sense." * "This is just a more realistic view, less punitive measure for an offender, and it goes along with the governor's call that there should be treatment over incarceration," Gusciora said. "The bottom line is the police have better things to do than a crime really committed against oneself, rather than society." * "Some acts harm society, and they warrant the intervention of police, prosecutors and perhaps even incarceration," said Assemblyman Michael Patrick Carroll, R-Morris. "Other acts warrant at best a spanking, and this seems to be one of those situations, where the harm to society, if it exists at all, is de minimus." Carroll is perhaps the Legislature's most conservative member, Gusciora its most liberal, and their alliance on the issue has been a topic of humor in the capital. Carroll has been happy to engage in it - - "perhaps there is hope for him yet," he said of Gusciora - but says a serious talk about the larger issue of drug policy ought to be on the horizon. "At some point or another, society, writ broadly, is going to have a have a calm, sober, logical, dispassionate discussion on the costs and benefits of a prohibitionary regime," Carroll said. "The costs to me are obvious in terms of the involvement of government, the expense and as we see down in Mexico, the consequence of illegalizing drugs is almost open warfare. Obviously no one tries to smuggle aspirin across the international border because it's not illegal." [sidebar] AT A GLANCE As of January, 22 percent of all New Jersey prisoners were locked up for drug violations - more than 5,200 of the 23,810 inmates. Nearly 1 of every 5 locked-up drug offenders were there for drug possession, with the other 80 percent there for sale or distribution. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom