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Community Groups, Elected Officials to Gather on April 25 in Support of Brooklyn DA Ken Thompson’s Proposal to Stop Prosecuting Low-Level Marijuana Possession Cases


Major Step Will Dramatically Reduce the Number of People in Brooklyn Unfairly Saddled with Lifelong Criminal Records; Advocates, Community Groups Applaud DA Thompson for His Leadership and Demand Reform at City Hall and in Albany

NEW YORK—(ENEWSPF)—April 24, 2014. On Friday, April 25th at 11am, elected officials, community members and the coalition, New Yorkers for Public Health & Safety, will rally on the steps of Brooklyn’s Borough Hall, 209 Joralemon Street, to applaud DA Ken Thompson’s proposal to stop prosecuting people arrested for possessing small amounts of marijuana. DA Thompson’s office hopes that “individuals, and especially young people of color, do not become unfairly burdened and stigmatized by involvement in the criminal justice system for engaging in nonviolent conduct that poses no threat of harm to persons or property,” according to The New York Times. The Times obtained a confidential policy memo that was sent by the district attorney to NYPD Commissioner Bill Bratton.

Advocates applaud Thompson’s efforts to address a broken law that has led to hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers being arrested for possessing small amounts of marijuana. Over the last fifteen years, over 600,000 people have been arrested for marijuana possession in New York City – the majority of whom are young men of color, even though young white men use marijuana at higher rates.

Last year, there were nearly 30,000 such arrests in New York City alone. Based on first-quarter data obtained from the state Division of Criminal Justice Services, NYPD is now on track to make nearly as many marijuana possession arrests in 2014 as it did in 2013, with similarly shocking racial disparities.

Proposals to fix New York’s marijuana possession law have stalled in Albany, leaving local jurisdictions to address the matter. In taking action with this bold and smart proposal, DA Thompson is using his discretionary authority as the top law enforcement officer in Brooklyn to create more equitable outcomes, focus law enforcement resources on real public safety issues, and end an egregious, ineffective, wasteful criminal justice practice. The District Attorney’s program does not limit police officers from issuing a summons or even making an arrest.  

Related Material: 

New York Times

Proposal to Limit Prosecutions of Marijuana Cases in Brooklyn, Stephanie Clifford, APRIL 23, 2014

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/24/nyregion/in-brooklyn-proposing-to-end-prosecutions-for-low-level-marijuana-offenses.html?hp&_r=0

BuzzFeed

How A Small-Time Marijuana Arrest Has Devastated A Great Teacher’s Life, Julie Dressner and Jesse Hicks, December 8, 2013

http://www.buzzfeed.com/jdressner/a-marijuana-arrest

Source: www.drugpolicy.org

 


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