The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

State to review past cannabis cases

- By Ken Dixon

HARTFORD — Hundreds of people or more in prison, on probation or awaiting trial have been left out of the state’s program to erase criminal records for cannabis possession and sales, Chief State’s Attorney Patrick Griffin said Wednesday, promising lawmakers that he will soon confer with Connecticu­t prosecutor­s to draft an administra­tive order to help the effort.

Griffin told the legislativ­e Judiciary Committee that the 2021 law legalizing possession and retail sales that began in January of this year was not retroactiv­e in the order to expunge the criminal records of people prosecuted or jailed, suggesting that the General Assembly pass legislatio­n this year making the law retroactiv­e, while he confers later this month on administra­tive changes.

Griffin said it’s hard to get a handle on exactly how many people would have their records cleared under the legislatio­n, which would order the Division of Criminal Justice to cease prosecutio­n of any pending cannabisre­lated cases and review those currently in prison or on probation to possibly modify their charges and penalties. He warned that another section of the proposed bill could violate the state Constituti­on’s separation-of-powers rules.

“Are there currently pending charges against individual­s in the state of Connecticu­t for possession of cannabis?” asked Rep. Steve Stafstrom, D-Bridgeport, co-chairman of the Judiciary Committee who was a leading proponent of the 2021 law. “I would say the answer is yes,” Griffin replied. “The conduct occurred before the passage of the bill. I will tell you very directly that I have had conversati­ons with all 13 state’s attorneys (and) that we are in agreement that what is legal today shouldn’t be penalized because it occurred prior to the passage of the bill.”

Stafstrom asked whether it would be easier for Griffin’s department to do the expunging, to the which the prosecutor agreed. “When will that be accomplish­ed by?” Stafstrom queried. Griffin

said he is meeting with the prosecutor­s later this month.

“I know that there is a lack of prosecutor­s in the state and I’m concerned that actions are being undertaken to possibly prosecute cases that would be vacated upon conviction, basically,” said Rep. Craig Fishbein, a top Republican on the law-writing panel. “I’m troubled. I think it was passed quite a long time ago and I don’t know why this hasn’t been addressed previously. People don’t understand that sometimes there is a parade of horribles that follows those charges. Violation of probation can sometimes be attached to a criminal charge.”

Earlier, during a morning news conference among cannabis advocates, Luis Vega owner of a Shelton hemp farm and Nautilus Botanicals in Bridgeport, said that as an approved social equity operator, he is prevented from hiring some people who could help his adultuse operation, but their criminal records prevent it. “This should have been thought about last year,” said state Rep. Anthony Nolan, D-New London, a proponent of cannabis reforms who appeared with other advocates including Vega.

“This is activity that we no longer believe should be criminaliz­ed,” said Sarah Gersten, executive director of the non-profit Last Prisoner Project, to the committee. “This is activity that we know, both prohibitio­n and the war on drugs, there’s a large body of evidence to show that these crimes were designed primarily to marginaliz­e and subjugate communitie­s of color. But we now have the chance to remedy the fact that there are still tens of thousands of people across the country and here in Connecticu­t incarcerat­ed, facing pending prosecutio­n or serving terms of supervisio­n for the exact same activity others are now able to profit off of in the state of Connecticu­t.”

Gov. Ned Lamont, who signed the 2021 legalizati­on bill, said as many as 40,000 people in the state would have their records erased starting at the beginning of 2023.

 ?? Ken Dixon/Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo ?? Sarah Gersten, executive director of the Last Prisoner Project, advocating for legislatio­n to erase the criminal records of more people who were convicted of marijuana possession or/and sales.
Ken Dixon/Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo Sarah Gersten, executive director of the Last Prisoner Project, advocating for legislatio­n to erase the criminal records of more people who were convicted of marijuana possession or/and sales.

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