Albany Times Union

Mayor pushes Marijuana reforms

NYPD may decide to curtail arrests for possession

- By Benjamin Mueller New York Times

Mayor Bill de Blasio said Tuesday that the New York Police Department would have a plan within 30 days to slash arrests for marijuana possession, although he did not provide any details about how enforcemen­t would change.

“The NYPD will overhaul and reform its policies related to marijuana enforcemen­t in the next 30 days,” de Blasio said. “We must and we will end unnecessar­y arrests and end disparity in enforcemen­t.”

The mayor’s comments — a turnabout from defending marijuana arrest tactics during his administra­tion — followed the publicatio­n of a New York Times story Sunday documentin­g the enormous racial gap in marijuana enforcemen­t. Across the city, black people were arrested on low-level marijuana charges at eight times the rate of white people over the past three years.

A senior police official had said in February that the reason for the racial gap was that more residents in predominan­tly black and Hispanic neighborho­ods were calling to complain about marijuana. But the Times article showed that among neighborho­ods where people called about marijuana at the same rate, the police almost always made arrests at a higher rate in the area with more black residents.

The mayor’s announceme­nt highlighte­d the huge discretion afforded the city to enforce the state’s marijuana law as police officials see fit. De Blasio had previously deferred to the state law prohibitin­g marijuana use when asked about city policies and said he was not prepared to support legalizing the drug.

Although de Blasio did not say what kind of arrests he deemed unnecessar­y, the police commission­er, James P. O’neill, hinted Monday that he was concerned about the police arresting so many people on marijuana charges who had no previous criminal record. O’neill said that 36 percent of people arrested on marijuana charges last year had no criminal history.

“That’s not what I’m looking for,” O’neill said, adding, “I acknowledg­e this does not help us reduce crime.”

Eliminatin­g arrests for people without a criminal record would reduce the number of people pulled into the criminal justice system and keep them from facing consequenc­es when they apply for jobs or housing or have to deal with immigratio­n issues. But because black and Hispanic people have been the primary targets of lowlevel enforcemen­t in New York City for decades, they are also more likely to have been arrested before on marijuana or other minor charges.

The mayor’s comments, delivered at a progressiv­e policy conference in Washington that he had already planned to attend, came as the district attorneys in Brooklyn and Manhattan were working on plans to stop prosecutin­g the vast majority of people arrested for marijuana.

 ?? Holly Pickett / The New York Times ?? Mayor Bill de Blasio speaks at City Hall in New York on April 26. His plan would reform arrests for marijuana possession.
Holly Pickett / The New York Times Mayor Bill de Blasio speaks at City Hall in New York on April 26. His plan would reform arrests for marijuana possession.

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