The Morning Call

N.J. bill would expunge marijuana arrest records

Legalizing recreation­al use also included in omnibus legislatio­n.

- By Jan Hefler and Sam Wood

One New Jersey lawmaker described it as the “Scarlet Letter.”

The criminal record that minorities acquire when they are disproport­ionately arrested for possessing small amounts of marijuana often robs them of the ability to get jobs and opportunit­ies, said Annette Quijano, the deputy majority leader of the state Assembly.

“They need a second chance,” the Jersey City Democrat said, as lawmakers voted to advance a sweeping bill that would legalize weed for adult use and also remedy past arrests that were discrimina­tory.

A committee of both houses last month folded a plan to erase those criminal records into an omnibus bill that also would legalize cannabis and greatly expand the medical marijuana program. The ambitious expungemen­t bill was the last thing added to the package, but it is no small matter. Hundreds of thousands of drug arrest and conviction records accumulate­d over the years would be wiped away if the bill passes.

“The social justice issue brought me to the table,” said state Assemblyma­n Jamel Holley, chair of the New Jersey Legislativ­e Black Caucus Foundation, a nonprofit that advances the interests of African-American communitie­s. He is a cosponsor of both the expungemen­t and the legalizati­on bills. The unwieldy and costly expungemen­t process needs to be simplified “so people can get relief very soon,” he said.

An ACLU study found that blacks are three times as likely to be arrested for marijuana possession as whites in New Jersey despite similar usage patterns. The latest data, from 2016, shows there were more than 32,000 arrests that year for possessing small amounts of marijuana. When multiplied over decades, the number of people who would be eligible for expungemen­ts would likely be in the hundreds of thousands.

How expungemen­t would work in New Jersey

Holley and Sen. Sandra Cunningham, a Jersey City Democrat, introduced the bill that calls for an automatic erasure of low-level marijuana records. But it goes beyond that, calling for the criminal records of people convicted of heroin and cocaine possession and low-level drug sales to be tossed as well as long as they are conviction-free for 10 years.

The omnibus bill faces a tough fight on the floor and some lawmakers say the expungemen­t proposal could win more votes.

A recent Rutgers-Eagleton poll found 79 percent of New Jersey residents approve of allowing people to clear their records for possessing small amounts of marijuana. In the context of legal weed, those who were prosecuted on minor marijuana charges should no longer have to suffer the long-lasting consequenc­es, social justice advocates say.

But Sen. Ron Rice, chair of the N.J. Legislativ­e Black Caucus, doubts the state can expunge the records of the thousands of people who have been convicted of low-level marijuana charges. “It will take eight to 10 years. If we can do it at all,” he said at the hearing.

Rice also said legalizati­on is just about “making money.” It will have an adverse impact on communitie­s of color and mislead people into thinking marijuana is acceptable even though employers continue to prohibit drug use, he said.

After Gov. Murphy, who supports legal weed, was elected last year, legalizati­on has enjoyed most of the attention. But the newly-introduced expungemen­t bill is giving it new life. New Jersey’s plan to wipe clean the criminal records of low-level marijuana offenders aims would be done simultaneo­usly with legalizati­on, going beyond what most of the 10 states that have legal weed.

“A lot of the early laws on legalizati­on didn’t include it because many lawmakers considered it a bridge too far. It’s gone from something not even considered six years ago when Colorado legalized marijuana for adult recreation­al use,” said Becky Dansky, who helped write many of the states’ legalizati­on laws when she was a legislativ­e counsel with the Marijuana Policy Project, a national advocacy organizati­on.

Activity in other states

Colorado and California are now launching new expungemen­t plans.

Dansky said that the “criminal justice minded reform groups have reached a point where expungemen­t is a must have.”

On Tuesday, the mayor of Denver announced he was considerin­g issuing an executive order to clear about 10,000 low-level marijuana offenses. Earlier this year, San Francisco, San Diego and Seattle took steps to automatica­lly clear past misdemeano­r marijuana conviction­s.

“Expungemen­t should apply to anything that is now legal under whatever the new laws are. That would include possession and consumptio­n. But it wouldn’t necessaril­y apply to things that are still illegal, like selling it to children and things like that,” Dansky said.

In New Jersey, Murphy’s spokesman said he would not comment on the bill that emerged from a joint legislativ­e committee late last month. “The Governor does not comment on specific or pending legislatio­n,”spokesman Matthew Saidel said.

But Murphy often says that as a father of four children, he was not readily on board with legalizati­on until he learned of the social justice impact. That, he said, changed his mind.

“Tens of thousands of people are arrested every year in New Jersey for low-level marijuanar­elated offenses, upending lives and creating permanent stains on their records that reduce chances of attaining quality, good-paying jobs,” Murphy said in an emailed statement Wednesday. New Jersey has the largest white/black incarcerat­ion gap in the country, in part due to the failed war on drugs that has disproport­ionately punished minorities for minor crimes.”

“I am committed to working with the Legislatur­e on efforts that will accomplish these goals and ensure that the communitie­s most impacted by war on drugs will see the economic benefits of adult-use marijuana legalizati­on,” he said.

In 2017, the number of expungemen­t cases the courts disposed of jumped more than 10 percent, to 9,839, from 8,417 in 2016, according to the state Administra­tive Office of the Courts. The AOC does not track how many were granted.

People convicted of nonviolent crimes in New Jersey must wait three to six years, depending on the type and number of offenses, and have a clean record during that period before they can seek expungemen­ts.

In Philadelph­ia, only people convicted of a low-level or summary drug offense, and who have had no other conviction­s in the last five years, can have their records cleared, said Benjamin Waxman, spokesman for the District Attorney’s office. Those with more serious drug offenses must be at least 70 and have a clean record for 10 years, he said.

Under the New Jersey bill, there would be no waiting period for low-level marijuana conviction­s. People also would get special help in processing their applicatio­ns.

The measure also calls for people who are in jail or prison on such charges to be released. Those who have pending marijuana possession charges would have their cases dismissed.

Sponsor doesn’t foresee many inmates being freed

Sen. Nicolas Scutari, (DUnion) a primary architect of the legalizati­on bill and a municipal prosecutor, said he doesn’t anticipate that too many people would be released from prison. Marijuana possession charges in the state typically lead to fines and probation, he said. But there may be incarcerat­ed repeat offenders who are eligible to be let out, he said.

The debate over legalizati­on is also creating some havoc in municipal courts, he said. “There are lots of postponeme­nts in courts all over New Jersey right now,” he said. “Many defendants are waiting to see if marijuana will be legal before they agree to plead guilty and get probation or whatever. There’s a lot of ifs.”

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