LAW
ENFORCEMENT AGAINST PROHIBITION SUPPORTS OHIO ISSUE 3, MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION
New
Law Will Improve Public Safety, Reduce Justice System Burden
Today, Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP),
a group of police, prosecutors, judges, and other law enforcement professionals
working to end marijuana prohibition, declared their support for Ohio’s Issue 3,
the proposed constitutional amendment to tax and regulate marijuana in the
state. The law would legalize the production, sale, and adult consumption of
marijuana products in the state and permit licenses for specific distribution
companies. If passed, the law would permit home cultivation of up to four flowering
plants and possession and sharing of up to eight ounces by adults 21 and older
with a valid state license. The new law also protects patients of any age with
a doctor-certified debilitating condition by allowing safe access to regulated marijuana
products.
“Legalization
will take money away from the cartels, provide funding for public safety and
health services, and reduce the violence associated with the illegal drug
market. Passage of Issue Three puts us in charge, not the dealers,” said
Cincinnati Police Captain Howard Rahtz
(Ret.).
Ohio arrested nearly 12,000 adults
for marijuana possession and distribution in 2012. Almost all of those arrests
were for possession alone. While most individuals don’t serve jail time for possession
alone, an arrest is a costly, damaging, and time-consuming ordeal. Marijuana
arrests can cost steep fines, require defendants take time off work for court
appearances, limit job and educational opportunities, and even take away rights
from stable and nurturing parents. The process of an arrest is even more
damaging to those in impoverished communities who often have less freedom with
taking time off work, less cash for unplanned expenses, and fewer opportunities
for economic mobility.
“Regulating marijuana is the only way we can be sure to keep
it out of the hands of criminals, and ultimately, keep our kids and streets
safer,” said Maj. Neill Franklin (Ret.),
executive director for LEAP. “Controlling the drug has always been the goal –
we’ve just been going about it the wrong way for a very long time.”
LEAP joins Issue 3
supporters that include former Cincinnati Police Chief Tom Streicher, the
American Civil Liberties Union of Ohio, and the National Organization for the
Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML). Ohio voters will make a decision on November
3rd, 2015.
The support of this bill makes me deeply question the intents of LEAP, and leads me to believe they are either blind to corruption or outright condoning it.
ReplyDelete"Passage of Issue Three puts us in charge, not the dealers"
False. It would've put those owning the 10 facilities licensed to create and distribute the newly legalized substance in charge. This proposal actually put monopolization and corruption on the ballot, while covering it in a nice green wrapper. The failure of those in charge at LEAP to see this leads to a belief that acceptance of the good ol' boy system is still rampant, even among groups that seem to, or put up the front of, being for the people.