Pubdate: Thu, 04 Oct 2012 Source: Journal and Courier (IN) Copyright: 2012 Federated Publications, Inc Contact: http://www.jconline.com/services/forms/letter_to_editor.shtml Website: http://www.jconline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1691 Author: Sophia Voravong BILL PUTS MARIJUANA PENALTIES ISSUE BACK BEFORE LEGISLATORS It's not uncommon for state Sen. Ron Alting, R-Lafayette, to field phone calls and emails from worried parents and grandparents whose children or grandchildren were arrested for possessing marijuana. Their concerns are almost always in the same vein: " 'Senator, my kid made a bad choice. ... He's going to get a felony out of this. It's going to ruin his life forever' for, relatively speaking, a small amount of marijuana," Alting recalled Tuesday. " 'It's going to limit him. ... It's a black eye when he's looking for a job. It's a felony that won't go away.' " The issue - whether any portion of Indiana's marijuana possession laws should be decriminalized - could be one that Alting, who sits on the Senate's Judiciary Committee, will hear during the General Assembly's next session. Though legislators don't meet until January, one of them, Sen. Brent Steele, R-Bedford, has already announced plans to sponsor a bill that would reduce penalties for people caught with small amounts of marijuana. More specifically, Steele, chairman of the Senate committee on corrections, criminal and civil matters, wants to make possession of 10 grams or less of marijuana an infraction - similar to a traffic violation-instead of a misdemeanor, he told the Indianapolis Business Journal last month. Steele's proposal is not new, but rather a continuation of sorts from 2011, when a northwest Indiana lawmaker pushed for a committee to study the issue. A bill to decriminalize small amounts of marijuana got a hearing before the Senate, but it was not brought to a vote. "I think what it comes down to, what the question is, is 'What's the penaltyUKP' Does the penalty fit the crime?" Alting said. Currently, the punishment for possession of marijuana begins as a Class A misdemeanor, and offenders face up to one year incarceration - - though prison time for any misdemeanor is rare. That applies for first-time offenders caught with less than 30 grams of marijuana. Having a prior conviction for possession of marijuana ups the offense to a Class D felony, the lowest-level felony in Indiana. Offenders face six months to three years incarceration. (Worth noting: Tippecanoe County judges sent 101 people convicted of Class D felonies to prison in 2010, which can include theft, possession of marijuana and child neglect offenses.) In Tippecanoe County, from 2009 to 2011, roughly 75 percent of possession of marijuana charges filed by the prosecutor's office were misdemeanors, according to data provided by Clerk Christa Coffey. Through the end of September this year, 453 possession of marijuana charges have been filed, with Class D felonies accounting for 23 percent thus far. Thirty grams of marijuana is slightly more than an ounce, roughly enough to make 30 to 60 marijuana cigarettes. Possessing more than 30 grams of marijuana is considered beyond personal use under current Indiana law, and the offense becomes dealing in marijuana. The West Lafayette Police Department relies on that distinction when deciding whether someone caught with pot will be hauled to the Tippecanoe County Jail or given a citation and a court date, Capt. Gary Sparger said. A citation is still considered a criminal arrest. Some officers can readily eyeball 30 grams or less of marijuana, Sparger said, though they also rely on electronic scales to weigh it. "Under 30 grams means no evidence of dealing and is considered personal use," he said. "We don't take them to jail because the jail is full enough as is. There's not enough room to jail all nonviolent offenders." Alting said he's willing to discuss decriminalizing small amounts of marijuana. However, he's against legalizing it altogether. "My personal opinion is that, if we legalize it, it would make our young people want to go on and try something harder," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom