The Commercial Appeal

Panel puts off vote on marijuana

- LINDA A. MOORE

A vote on a Shelby County ordinance that lessens the penalty for possession of a half-ounce or less of marijuana was sent to Monday’s full commission Wednesday without a vote.

Ordinance co-sponsor Van Turner asked that it be delayed to give the county attorney’s office time to determine if the law can be written for only the southeast portion of the county’s unincorpor­ated areas.

Commission­ers spent more than an hour debating the law that was intended to mirror an ordinance passed earlier this month in Memphis. It gives law enforcemen­t the option of issuing a citation with a $50 fine and up to 10 hours of community service.

Turner said the ordinance would apply only to his Southeast Shelby County district, where a person can stand in the street with “one leg in city of Memphis and one leg in county of Shelby.”

“We’re not saying kids go out here and smoke weed. We’re not saying, hey, you can do this in front of law enforcemen­t and not be arrested. We’re not endorsing the use of any illicit or illegal drugs. We’re not saying this is right. We’re not decriminal­izing marijuana. We’re not asking to legalize marijuana,” Turner said.

They’re just giving law enforcemen­t another option for someone caught with a half-ounce or less, he said.

Current punishment­s trap people in the criminal justice system, said Commission­er Reginald Milton, Turner’s co-sponsor.

“The goal should be to try to prevent people to be drawn into the criminal justice system in the first place,” Milton said.

Sheriff’s office Chief Inspector Mark Kellerhall cautioned commission­ers that Colorado has seen increased problems since marijuana was legalized and similar issues could arise if the penalty here is reduced, giving the public the impression that marijuana is legal.

That half-ounce could produce up to 33 joints and be worth as much as $3,000, Kellerhall said as he used oregano to illustrate what a halfounce of marijuana looks like.

People can become dependent upon marijuana, making them unemployab­le, he said.

“If you don’t have a job to buy it

you’re going to commit a criminal act. So we’re looking at this as a stepping-stone to increased crime numbers,” Kellerhall said.

Because Colorado has legalized marijuana, Turner asked Kellerhall to share with them on Monday informatio­n from cities in states where marijuana is not legal, but where the penalties have been reduced.

Also against the proposal was Sgt. Dan Chapman, president of the Shelby County Deputy Sheriff’s Associatio­n, who pointed out the potential liabilitie­s to the county an officer on the street has to consider when deciding who goes to jail and who gets a citation.

He spoke about a call he made concerning a man who was obviously high at a convenienc­e store. He intended to issue him a citation, but because the man wouldn’t call anyone to come and take him home, Chapman had to take him to jail. Otherwise, the county would have been liable if he’d fallen in the street on the way home and been hit by a car.

Meanwhile, commission­ers cited the county’s other priorities and the need to discourage drug use in their opposition to the ordinance, which will need nine votes on the 13-member body to pass.

“I really don’t see a scenario where I can support this. I polled the people in my district. The people I represent are against it. I’m against it as well,” said Commission­er Steve Basar, who added, “We as a body and we as a community have bigger fish to fry.”

Marijuana is illegal, said Commission­er Eddie Jones, a former Memphis Police officer.

“I believe you should be working more toward getting people not to use the drugs,” Jones said.

The fact that a felony arrest can follow someone like a life sentence is a mistake, said Commission­er Heidi Shafer, but there are other ways to address that besides lowering the penalty for marijuana possession.

Only the sponsors, along with Commission­er Walter Bailey, voiced support, saying it made sense to give officers options.

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