I am deeply concerned about both Joan Vennochi's column ("Like Bill
Clinton, I didn't inhale," July 12) and the political coalition that
opposes the marijuana legalization initiative ("Mass. leaders join
against marijuana legislation"). While decriminalization in
Massachusetts has been a worthwhile and successful step in reducing
the number of arrests for marijuana possession, it has not gone far enough.
I have worked with the Committee for Public Counsel Services for many
years, and found that police officers routinely charge people not
only with possession, but with intent to distribute marijuana, which
almost automatically adds in the school zone provision. Virtually
everywhere in any urban area is within 1,000 feet of what is defined
as a school zone. This brings felony conviction, mandatory minimum
sentences, and the potential for total unemployability in the future,
not to mention the harm that comes from prison time. It does so with
no evidence that it accomplishes any positive purpose in the vast
majority of those incarcerated, nor for society.
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