St. Pete considers decriminalizing marijuana possession

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St. Petersburg City Council
St. Petersburg City Council. By Seán Kinane / WMNF News (28 January 2016).

The St. Petersburg City Council wants people caught with small amounts of marijuana to be fined rather than arrested for a misdemeanor. In case neither the state nor Pinellas County makes those changes to the law, Council has asked its legal staff to write an ordinance to give people caught with less than 20 grams of pot a civil citation. After a committee meeting Thursday morning City Council member Steve Kornell said suggestions made by St. Pete Police would be taken into account.

The reason St. Pete is looking at decriminalizing possession of small amounts of pot is because arrests seem to disproportionally affect poor and black people. WMNF interviewed Kofi Hunt, an organizer with the group St. Pete for Justice.

“I think it’s important because marijuana, if you look at the history it was made illegal as a racial tool against people of color. And the results you’ve seen over the past few decades that people of color have been overwhelmingly arrested for possession of marijuana.”

City Council member Kornell says he wants to see the local arrest numbers.

“The ACLU and the American Bar Association, both talked about things. Both credible organizations, none of which are a private company running anything and making any profit off of it. Racial disparities and income disparities in the outcome that you get. So, we all agree marijuana is maybe not – I don’t think anybody here would say that marijuana is great. But, the issue for me is not that; the issue for me is you shouldn’t get an unfair penalty, or a different penalty based on your income level. And I believe that happens.”

So, are people caught with small amounts of marijuana in St. Petersburg arrested? St. Pete Police Major Paul McWade says that isn’t a simple question to answer.

“I’ve asked a lot of officers about why somebody would arrest and take ’em to jail if it’s just a misdemeanor amount of marijuana. And it’s usually something else, like either, you know, VICE asked me to stop anybody and arrest anybody in this area because we’re looking at that area for narcotics. And that might be a case where I would have taken somebody for a misdemeanor amount of marijuana. Or what I hear from some officers are is when I checked out with them, all I got was attitude, they didn’t want to give me their name. So in that case, that person is probably going to go to jail.”

City Council member Kornell distributed the notes from a meeting about marijuana decriminalization that happened when members of City Council were in session and couldn’t attend.

“The clerk of the court, Ken Burke, held this meeting with everybody, had an opening speaker that said, a main speaker from Hernando County that said: Well I’m completely biased. I don’t believe in this at all but, let’s take an objective look at it and see what we decide on it. Before the county commission even had a chance to meet to even have any discussion of it. And I applaud Commissioner Welsh for bringing it forward. We support him and we want to work with him. I applaud Sheriff Gualtieri I’m fine with everybody, you know I’m fine. We want to work with everybody. But, the idea that you know, as Bernie McCabe said, ‘We’re just going to tell the elected officials what were doing.’ No, I don’t think so. Not this elected official.”

Bernie McCabe, the State Attorney serving Pinellas and Pasco Counties.

Kornell says he is optimistic about a county-wide ordinance to decriminalize recreational marijuana possession after his conversations with Pinellas County Commission chair Ken Welsh.

In other pot news, a constitutional amendment legalizing medical marijuana passed a threshold Wednesday– it has enough certified signatures to be on November’s ballot.

Here’s video of the St. Petersburg City Council Public Services and Infrastructure Committee Meeting, part 1:

Video of the St. Petersburg City Council Public Services and Infrastructure Committee Meeting, part 2:

 

2 Responses to “St. Pete considers decriminalizing marijuana possession”

  1. Kofi Hunt

    St Pete for Justice is happy to organize around this issue. Reinterpreting criminal justice is one of the most important civil rights causes of the 21st century #KeepItCivil #StPete4Justice

    Reply
  2. malcolmkyle

    The drug war is all about preventing people from using the non-toxic alternative, marijuana.

    Partnership for a Drug Free America

    Sources of Funding from 1988-91

    Extracted from Federal Tax Returns

    (figures are approximate)

    Pharmaceutical Firms

    J. Seward Johnson, Sr. Charitable Trusts — $1.1 million

    Du Pont — 125,000

    Proctor and Gamble Fund — 120,000

    Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation — 115,000

    Johnson & Johnson — 100,000

    Merck Foundation — 85,000

    Hoffman-LaRoche — 75,000

    Tobacco and Liquor Firms

    Phillip Morris — 125,000

    Anheuser-Busch — 100,000

    RJ Reynolds — 100,000

    American Brands — 100,000

    Prohibition is nothing less than a grotesque dystopian nightmare; if you support it you must be either ignorant, stupid, brainwashed, criminally insane, or totally corrupt.

    Reply

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