Pubdate: Tue, 28 Jan 2014 Source: Tulsa World (OK) Copyright: 2014 World Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.tulsaworld.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/463 Author: Dylan Goforth LEGAL POT PUSHED AFTER POLL SHOWS PUBLIC SUPPORT During her time in office, Sen. Constance Johnson has proposed a number of bills aimed at easing Oklahoma's strict marijuana laws, and this year is no different. Senate Bill 2116, proposed by Johnson, D-Oklahoma City, would legalize a small amount of "personal use" marijuana - up to an ounce - - as well as set up rules for the sale and growth of the product. Although 20 states now have legalized marijuana for medical use, Johnson's bill is unlikely to pass. A 2013 poll conducted by SoonerPoll indicated that 75 percent of Tulsans were in favor of legalization of medical marijuana and that 67 percent were in favor of decriminalization for recreational use. Support crossed party lines; the poll found that 53.1 percent of Republicans, 60.3 percent of Democrats and 64.5 percent of independents favored decriminalization. The effect on the prison population would be immediate, said Neill Franklin, executive director of Silver Spring, Md.-based Law Enforcement Against Prohibition. Franklin, a former police officer, was in Oklahoma last week speaking about what he considers the benefits of decriminalization. "It won't just be the people who won't be in jail because of a marijuana-possession arrest," Franklin said. "Once you push something underground, like marijuana or alcohol, we drive it into a criminal marketplace, and other crimes ensue." Franklin noted that "we have drug addicts who, because we provide them no legal means to acquire the drugs they're addicted to, they resort to crime to fund it. They break into homes, rob you on the street. ... This is the problem of prohibition. "For those addicted to alcohol, you rarely hear about them committing crimes to feed their addiction." Data provided by the Tulsa Police Department show 689 arrests in the city for possession of marijuana in 2013. Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation statistics show that possession of marijuana "constituted 49.7 percent of the total drug abuse arrests in 2012," the latest year such statewide data were available. Possession crimes can net up to a year in jail, although a first offense likely will end in a court citation and probation, Tulsa Police Officer Leland Ashley said. Tulsa County District Attorney Tim Harris is opposed to decriminalization. Where Franklin has pointed to the illegality of marijuana possession creating a public health and safety hazard, Harris says he sees the opposite. "The problem we have is that in the '60s, the THC (tetrahydrocannabino - the psychoactive component of marijuana) content was a small amount," Harris said. "The marijuana being grown and shipped now ... the THC content now is almost 20 percent. One joint someone is smoking now is a far different drug with a far more potent effect on human physiology than it was in the 1960s." And, Harris believes, decriminalization will lead to more impaired drivers. "In Colorado (where personal marijuana use was recently legalized), what are they going to do with impaired-driving accidents and injuries?" he asked. "Are they just turning the other cheek toward those impaired-driving cases?" - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom