Dayton Daily News

3K with pot conviction­s to have records cleared

San Francisco DA to automatica­lly erase conviction­s.

- Timothy Williams and Thomas Fuller

Thousands of people with misdemeano­r pot possession conviction­s dating back 40 years will have their criminal records cleared, the San Francisco district attorney’s office said Wednesday.

Recreation­al marijuana became legal in California this year, and the law allowed those with prior low-level offenses to petition for expungemen­t, a process that can be costly.

But in San Francisco, people need not ask. George Gascón, San Francisco’s district attorney, said his office would automatica­lly erase those conviction­s, which total about 3,000.

An additional 4,900 felony marijuana charges will be examined by prosecutor­s to determine if they should be retroactiv­ely reduced to misdemeano­rs.

California was far from the first state to legalize recreation­al marijuana, but it is at the forefront of offering relief to people convicted of offenses that would not get them in trouble today.

A number of cities even decided to give preference to those who have previous marijuana conviction­s when giving out licenses to sell it legally. Oakland reserved at least half of its eight annual dispensary licenses for what it calls equity applicants, which include not only those convicted of marijuana-related crimes, but those who live in neighborho­ods that had a disproport­ionately higher number of cannabis-related arrests. On Wednesday, officials there spun a bingo machine to choose the four winners among 36 applicants.

Other places have taken the opposite tack. In Nevada, Gov. Brian Sandoval vetoed legislatio­n last year that would have allowed people convicted of possessing 1 ounce or less of marijuana to have their conviction­s vacated, even though that is no longer a criminal offense.

And in Colorado, it took five years after voters approved recreation­al marijuana use before the state passed legislatio­n last year that allows people with pot conviction­s to apply to have their records cleared.

The result has been legal limbo: People whose behavior would not now be considered illegal are sometimes unable to find work, get college loans, obtain profession­al licenses or find decent housing because of the blot on their record.

Those who argue against expunging criminal records say people who violated the law should live with the consequenc­es, regardless of subsequent legal changes.

“In all the other states, the process has been messy. But whether people agree with what they did or not, California at least addressed it and there’s value in that,” said Robert Mikos, a professor at Vanderbilt University who studies marijuana law and policy.

Even in California, there is significan­t variation in how counties are handling misdemeano­r pot conviction­s. Some, like Fresno County, are dealing with them on a case-by-case basis, said Steve E. Wright, the county’s assistant district attorney. Prosecutor­s in San Francisco and San Diego have been more proactive, with both cities planning to automatica­lly dismiss or downgrade conviction­s.

In San Francisco, Gascón said he wanted to avoid putting people through a process that he said violates the spirit of legalizati­on.

“A lot of people don’t even know they qualify, and I don’t think it’s the right thing to do to make people pay lawyers’ fees and jump through a bunch of hoops to get something they should be getting anyway,” he said.

 ?? THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The first day of legal recreation­al marijuana sales in California was Jan. 1. Thousands of people with misdemeano­r pot possession conviction­s now will have criminal records automatica­lly cleared.
THE NEW YORK TIMES The first day of legal recreation­al marijuana sales in California was Jan. 1. Thousands of people with misdemeano­r pot possession conviction­s now will have criminal records automatica­lly cleared.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States