Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

3,000 marijuana cases tossed at prosecutor’s request

- By Jennifer Peltz

Over 3,000 lowlevel marijuana cases were thrown out Wednesday as Manhattan’s top prosecutor furthered a shift away from arresting and prosecutin­g many people for small-time pot offenses in the nation’s biggest city.

Misdemeano­r and violation-level pot possession cases that had sat open for as long as 40 years were dismissed in a matter of minutes after Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance Jr. asked a court to scrap 3,042 warrants for people who missed court dates and to toss out the cases themselves. He recently decided to stop prosecutin­g many minor pot possession cases and argued it made sense to spare people potential arrests in old ones.

“If anyone was brought in today on one of these warrants, my office would dismiss the case,” the Democrat said. He called the mass dismissal “something that is off-script but actually serves the interests of justice enormously.”

None of the people charged in the cases was there to hear Criminal Court Judge Kevin McGrath wipe them out. Some may long since have forgotten about the cases.

But now they no longer face potential problems getting jobs or housing if the warrants pop up during background checks, or possible arrest if their IDs are checked during otherwise routine interactio­ns with police — after a fender-bender, for instance, or while reporting a crime.

“They are living with the peril of being put through the system for almost no reason,” said Carolyn Wilson, director of New York County Defender Services. Her group and Neighborho­od Defender Services of Harlem are ready to help people seeking to figure out whether the dismissals affect them.

Vance and Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez decided this summer not to prosecute most new misdemeano­r pot possession and smoking cases, saying they had little public safety impact but caused defendants problems with employment, housing, immigratio­n and more.

The two DAs oversee prosecutio­ns in two of the city’s five boroughs; all five DAs are Democrats.

Gonzalez announced a plan last week that could erase an estimated 20,000 minor pot conviction­s. Queens DA Richard Brown’s office said it would review any misdemeano­r marijuana possession cases there that haven’t been dismissed.

Vance said Wednesday he was exploring the legalities of potentiall­y voiding old conviction­s but hoped state lawmakers would create a certain path for doing so. For now, he said he was using prosecutor­s’ discretion to drop open pot-possession cases and warrants as a move toward fairness.

“You can drive down the West Side Highway at 75 miles an hour, and you’ll get a ticket . but if you are found smoking a marijuana cigarette, you’ll be arrested and put in cuffs” and held for up to 24 hours before going to court, Vance said at a news conference. “The offense, in our opinion, does not justify that level of enforcemen­t.”

New York allows marijuana-derived medication­s for some conditions, but recreation­al pot remains illegal, although Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo has appointed a panel to draft legislatio­n that could legalize it.

Meanwhile, New York City has been easing policing of minor pot possession, which spurred more than 50,000 arrests a year as recently as 2011. Last year, there were 17,880, according to the state Division of Criminal Justice Services.

 ?? MARY ALTAFFER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Manhattan District Attorney, Cyrus Vance, Jr., speaks to Seth Steed, center, Managing Attorney of the Criminal Defense Practice at Neighborho­od Defender Service of Harlem, and Director Carolyn P. Wilson, New York County Defender Services, after a hearing in Manhattan criminal court, Wednesday.
MARY ALTAFFER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Manhattan District Attorney, Cyrus Vance, Jr., speaks to Seth Steed, center, Managing Attorney of the Criminal Defense Practice at Neighborho­od Defender Service of Harlem, and Director Carolyn P. Wilson, New York County Defender Services, after a hearing in Manhattan criminal court, Wednesday.

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