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October 27, 2007
Waukesha County might ease prosecutions for pot
Posted by Gary Storck
Saturday, Oct. 27, 2007
As one who was born and raised in Waukesha, I'm pleased to hear that the County is finally looking at decriminalizing possession of small amounts of cannabis.
Last month, a friend I grew up with in Waukesha died from colon cancer after a two and half year fight. He was a barber and a pillar of the community. In a five-year period, he was arrested twice for small (read tiny) amounts of pot and a pipe. Both times it was an illegal search. The first time he hired an attorney to fight the charges, but the police officer lied on the stand and the judge upheld his lie.
Five years later, the same thing happens again. My friend, feeling that he wasted a lot of money in fighting the first illegal search, because of the judge-police collusion, takes a plea bargain where he is urine tested and quits using pot.
Meanwhile, he is developing colon cancer. Cannabis shrinks tumors and the US Government has known this since 1974. But because of Waukesha County's harsh treatment of pot offenders, my friend is forced to quit pot just as he needs it the most.
Once diagnosed as terminal, he used cannabis to treat the pain and the nausea from the weekly chemo treatments up until his death.
So harsh enforcement of pot laws have real consequences. In my late friend's case, a pot arrest in Waukesha was literally a death sentence! It's about time Waukesha County exercises a little discretion. This is not an isolated incident. Over the years, I have heard from others treated rudely and harshly by Waukesha County authorities for minor pot possession. They certainly have much more important things to worry about.
Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel click here
Pubdate: Oct. 27, 2007
Author: Scott Williams
COUNTY MIGHT EASE PROSECUTIONS FOR POTChange would mean ticket for simple possession
Waukesha - Joining a movement to decriminalize certain marijuana cases, Waukesha County officials are considering handling minor instances of possession like traffic tickets.
If the County Board approves, first-time offenders caught by sheriff's deputies with small amounts of marijuana or drug paraphernalia would be required only to pay a fine and would not get a criminal record. Currently, deputies refer all such cases to the district attorney's office for possible prosecution as misdemeanors, with penalties of up to six months in jail possible.
Many other municipalities and counties in Wisconsin already have taken steps toward decriminalization, but an advocate for relaxed marijuana laws expressed surprise that move would be under consideration in traditionally conservative Waukesha County.
"It's kind of an acknowledgment that Waukesha County is growing. They're not sweating the small stuff," said Madison-based activist Gary Storck.
Details of the proposed new policy have not been released yet. In Milwaukee County, offenders pay forfeitures of less than $500 in some cases if they have no significant criminal record and if they are caught with a small amount of pot for personal use only.
Waukesha County Sheriff Dan Trawicki said he supports the change because it would simplify the handling of minor drug cases and would ease needless strain on the court system.
Instead of processing an arrest and asking the district attorney to decide on criminal charges, a sheriff's deputy could just write a ticket and allow the defendant to pay a fine as a civil forfeiture.
"In certain cases, it's more efficient and it's appropriate," Trawicki said. "It's not going to change how we do business. It's just the manner in which we do business," he said.
The switch is reflected in the county's proposed 2008 budget as a new source of revenue for the Sheriff's Department, with $37,200 projected for the department next year. County Board members must approve the budget and a separate ordinance authorizing the new procedure.
Trawicki said officials have been discussing the change for several years but that it was opposed by then-District Attorney Paul Bucher. Bucher, who resigned last year after 18 years in office, said he could not endorse decriminalization while also working against drug abuse in programs such as DARE.
"I thought it sent out the wrong message for me personally," he said Thursday. "Philosophically, it wasn't consistent with my beliefs."
District Attorney Brad Schimel, however, said he believes that many people nowadays have tried marijuana and that residents of the county are ready for a limited level of decriminalization.
"I think times have changed," he said.
Sheriff's officials briefed a County Board committee on the idea recently while reviewing the 2008 budget proposal.
County Supervisor Bonnie Morris of Dousman, chairman of the Judiciary and Law Enforcement Committee, said the committee seemed to strongly support the idea.
Morris said many other municipalities in the area have already taken this step.
"It's not something that Sheriff Trawicki dreamed up," she said. "We're very comfortable with it."
Posted by Gary at October 27, 2007 10:06 AM
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