Chattanooga Times Free Press

Bill leaves some police unable to enforce pot laws

- BY MARK NIESSE

ATLANTA — The General Assembly recently passed a bill to help police enforce marijuana laws without hindering the state’s young hemp farming industry.

But prosecutor­s and police say it won’t change how they handle suspected marijuana cases.

Possession of small amounts of marijuana will remain decriminal­ized in several jurisdicti­ons, and a low priority in many others. Misdemeano­r cases are more likely to result in diversion classes or dismissals than prosecutio­ns.

Police can’t tell the difference between illegal marijuana and legal hemp plants, and law enforcemen­t officials said testing small amounts of green leafy substances is more trouble than it’s worth.

“Marijuana remains illegal in Georgia. That hasn’t changed,” said Pete Skandalaki­s, executive director for the Prosecutin­g Attorneys’ Council of Georgia. “The problem law enforcemen­t will face now is when there’s less than an ounce, there’s no field test that will let you distinguis­h between hemp and marijuana.”

The legislatio­n, which awaits Gov. Brian Kemp’s signature or veto, highlights the difficulty of allowing hemp farming while maintainin­g prohibitio­ns on recreation­al marijuana consumptio­n.

Hemp and marijuana look similar, and both come from the cannabis plant. But hemp, which is used to make CBD oil, contains less than 0.3% THC, the compound that gives marijuana users a high. CBD oil is sold in stores across Georgia as a treatment for pain, anxiety and insomnia.

Under the bill, transporta­tion of hemp plants without appropriat­e paperwork could result in misdemeano­r

charges, with penalties of up to a year in jail and a $1,000 fine.

But in practice, prosecutor­s aren’t going to be able to make a strong case unless they can prove that a substance is illegal marijuana, Skandalaki­s said. And the GBI crime lab will only test for the THC content of felony amounts, over 1 ounce. Field tests can show if a substance contains THC, but those tests don’t differenti­ate between hemp and marijuana, which usually contains at least 15% THC.

While prosecutor­s and law enforcemen­t agencies wanted stronger restrictio­ns on marijuana, the bill was essential to help start hemp farming in Georgia, said state Rep. John Corbett, a Republican from Lake Park.

The legislatio­n, House Bill 847, requires hemp farmers and processors to obtain licenses, allows out-of-state hemp sales and raises the annual processing fee to $50,000 a year, up from a $10,000 fee set last year. The fee to grow hemp would remain at $50 per acre.

“We needed to have this so the farmers could get growing,” Corbett said. “Hopefully it’s going to be a viable industry for our farmers. We’re going to keep working on it.”

State legislator­s should reconsider Georgia’s marijuana laws next year, said Terry Norris, executive director for the Georgia Sheriffs’ Associatio­n.

Norris said this year’s bill was “pretty soft.”

“We have to find language that will distinguis­h between the two substances, period,” Norris said. “It remains an issue for all law enforcemen­t and the public. A lot of jurisdicti­ons, particular­ly in the metro areas, are either not making cases or writing citations.”

Police have better things to do than test green leafy substances or try to bring charges for transporti­ng hemp without documentat­ion, said Brian Whiteside, solicitor-general in Gwinnett County.

“Nobody’s going to do that. That’s burdensome. It’s another law where the only word for it is ‘stupid,’” said Whiteside, whose office last year stopped prosecutin­g misdemeano­r marijuana cases. “Imagine stopping somebody and saying, ‘By the way, I’m going to have to arrest you for transporta­tion of hemp, but we can’t test it and the GBI won’t test it.’”

The legislatio­n also won’t affect how DeKalb County prosecutes low-level cases, according to the county solicitor’s office. Since last year, DeKalb has dismissed any single-count marijuana cases. Charges involving marijuana offenses are reviewed on a case-by-case basis.

The GBI has also scaled back marijuana efforts.

The agency last year permanentl­y discontinu­ed its Marijuana Certified Examiners Course, which taught police officers to perform tests to determine if leafy materials are marijuana, because the testing didn’t distinguis­h between hemp and marijuana, said GBI spokeswoma­n Nelly Miles.

The GBI will continue to conduct purity tests only in suspected felony marijuana cases, Miles said.

In the meantime, hemp farming is underway in Georgia. The state Department of Agricultur­e had approved licenses for nine hemp processors and 66 hemp growers as of last month.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY ROBIN RUDD ?? Blake Harris of Haygood Farms, in Marion County, Tenn., harvests a portion of the farm’s hemp crop in 2019.
STAFF PHOTO BY ROBIN RUDD Blake Harris of Haygood Farms, in Marion County, Tenn., harvests a portion of the farm’s hemp crop in 2019.

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