Mike Freeman said he forged the new policy in response to a flaw in Minnesota's marijuana law.
Someone
caught with a small amount of marijuana in Hennepin County will no
longer be prosecuted, County Attorney Mike Freeman said Thursday.
Freeman
said he forged the new policy in response to a flaw in Minnesota’s
marijuana law. Currently, if a person possesses up to 42.5 grams — an
amount about the size of a sandwich bag — the crime is punishable only
by a fine of up to $300, a petty misdemeanor. But at 45 grams, a person
can be charged with a felony.
Because he
believes such a penalty is grossly inappropriate and produces racial
disparities, Freeman said, his office won’t charge anyone who possesses
or sells under 100 grams of marijuana.
Instead, the defendant will be
considered for a diversion program, community service or a sentence that
will be dismissed after certain conditions are met.
Hennepin
now is the first county in Minnesota to have a low-level marijuana drug
policy, which Freeman started to develop more than a year ago. Ramsey
County recently implemented a no-charge policy that only deals with
amounts under 42.5 grams.
Freeman issued the policy internally in August but has spent several months since revising it.
“I had to
do something about it,” he said. “My job is to determine if people are
charged and how to spend my resources. Spending resources on these cases
is just wrong.”
Freeman’s
office didn’t have information available about felony cases that were
filed last year. But prosecuting low-level drug cases as felonies is
costly for the county attorney’s staff, the public defender’s office and
the courts, Freeman said.
Another key component of the policy is reducing racial disparities, especially among black men, he added.
The policy
lists several exceptions in which prosecutors would charge low-level
cases: If the person had a firearm, possessed a trace amount of another
illegal substance (including THC oil and wax) or was in the presence of a
child during a marijuana sale. Charges also can be filed because of
aggravating factors defined by state law, such as a previous conviction
or if the sale benefited a gang or involved a leader in a drug ring.
Chief
Hennepin County Public Defender Mary Moriarty, pointing to the possible
exceptions, said Freeman wasn’t telling the truth when touting the new
policy as being the end of low-level prosecutions. If he doesn’t want to
charge these cases, she asked, why would it matter that a person had a
prior conviction?
“Mike has
to be about transparency and the understanding of what the policy is,”
said Moriarty, who attended the hearing. “This is about fundamental
fairness issues.”
A new data dashboard
Freeman
discussed the policy Thursday during a County Board hearing where he
rolled out the county attorney office’s new data dashboard. The data,
which goes from 2014 to the present and will be updated daily, includes
juvenile and adult caseload figures, race of defendants, offense
breakdown and crime locations.
According
to census numbers on the dashboard, Hennepin County’s population is
approximately 69 percent white, 13 percent black, 7 percent
Hispanic/Latino, 7 percent Asian and 0.7 percent American Indian.
However,
felony and gross misdemeanor cases on average are 54 percent black, 33
percent white, 5 percent American Indian and 2 percent Asian. Data on
Hispanic/Latino people wasn’t consistently available.
Moriarty
said she applauded Freeman for catching up to the Minneapolis Police
Department, which she said has had a data dashboard for a year.
“But his office has horrific racial disparity in charging cases,” she said. “All I heard him do was blame others for this.”
Freeman
said the dashboard is the most revealing and comprehensive of any
prosecutor’s office in the United States. Along with his new marijuana
policy, he said, he wants to use it to help reduce racial disparities.
Several Hennepin County commissioners questioned how that would happen.
“What work is there left to do?” asked Commissioner Angela Conley. “What are the national models? What are the best practices?”
Commissioner
Jan Callison wanted to know how Freeman would measure his success in
reducing disparities. When Freeman responded that “it was a hell of a
question,” Commissioner Mike Opat said sharply, “It is the question.”
Commissioners had no public reaction or questions about the marijuana policy during Thursday’s hearing.
Freeman’s
marijuana policy has the support of the Minnesota County Attorneys
Association, but he said he had received some pushback from law
enforcement officials. Minneapolis police spokesman John Elder said the
department will continue to work with the county attorney’s office on
cases that rise to the threshold of charging.
Freeman
has led the charge at the Legislature with a bill to change the felony
marijuana law to be more in line with county policy. He acknowledged
that it could become moot if the drug is legalized in Minnesota.
Ramsey
County Attorney John Choi established his policy two weeks ago, but he
said it’s been in the works since last summer. That’s when 46 black men
were arrested by Minneapolis police in a sting and charged with felonies
over very small amounts of marijuana. Freeman later dismissed all
charges.
Although
Ramsey County has very few low-level marijuana cases, Choi said having a
policy was important for his staff and law enforcement. The policy
doesn’t prohibit charging low-level cases, but there would have to be a
very compelling public safety reason to file charges.
“I believe
Mike Freeman’s logic used in his policy is very valid, and I agree we
should be looking at ways of recalibrating our laws at the Legislature,”
he said.
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