AP/ June 8, 2011, 5:26 PM

Conn. passes bill to decriminalize marijuana

CBS/iStockphoto

HARTFORD, Conn. — The Connecticut House of Representatives on Tuesday passed legislation decriminalizing marijuana, with supporters calling it a "common sense reform." The measure heads to Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, who has promised to sign it into law.

After a nearly four-hour debate, the House voted 90-57 to soften the punishment for possession of less than a half-ounce of marijuana to fines of $150 for a first offense and $200 to $500 for subsequent offenses. Current state law classifies marijuana possession as a misdemeanor, punishable by a possible jail term and larger fines.

Those younger than 21 would face a 60-day driver's license suspension, similar to the current penalty for possessing alcohol.

The bill also requires anyone 18 years old or younger who is caught with less than a half-ounce to be referred to the state's juvenile courts. And it requires referral to a drug education program for anyone who for a third time enters a plea of no contest or is found guilty of possessing less than one half-ounce of marijuana.

Special section: Marijuana nation

Rep. J. Brendan Sharkey, House majority leader, touted the legislation's call for drug education.

"If the policy is to punish, there's also an argument to be made to prevent," he said.

In a statement, Malloy said lawmakers recognize that current law "does more harm than good — both in the impact it has on people's lives and the burden it places on police, prosecutors and probation officers of the criminal justice system."

"Let me make it clear — we are not legalizing the use of marijuana," said Malloy, a former prosecutor. "In modifying this law, we are recognizing that the punishment should fit the crime and acknowledging the effects of its application."

Opponents said marijuana is a harmful drug and that the law should keep it beyond reach.

Republican Rep. Lawrence Cafero, the House minority leader, criticized the legislation for what he said reduces the consequences for possession to a traffic ticket or an infraction. He said marijuana has ruined their lives of many young people.

"I've seen scores of students who were fantastic athletes, maybe they were talented musicians or sang in the choir. They filled their life with after-school activities," he said. "Now they quit. They've lost interest in baseball. They've lost interest in sports. I've heard parents say their kids don't want to do anything. They're lethargic."

Bill Simanski, a Granby Republican, said decriminalizing pot will be a boon to "crime syndicates and drug lords."

"It will benefit the people who get rich off of the sale of marijuana," he said.

Rep. Christopher Coutu, R-Norwich, said the legislation minimizes the unlawful use of marijuana.

"We're making a policy statement more than anything else that marijuana in many ways is less dangerous, less harmful than a speeding ticket or a cell phone while you're driving," he said.

The Senate last week passed the legislation with a tie-breaking vote by Lt. Gov. Nancy Wyman.

© 2011 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
39 Comments Add a Comment
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tsigili says:
That's not going to stop the illegal drug traffic, nor the crime associated with it.

Nor is it going to make people in Connecticut any safer.....quite the opposite....the marijuana is as bad as alcohol, in impairing people, and making them dangerous to others.
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tomanyt says:
Conn. passes bill to decriminalize marijuana....They didn't "decriminalize" anything. They just "soften the punishment for possession of less than a half-ounce of marijuana to fines of $150 for a first offense and $200 to $500 for subsequent offenses."
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OldGreengo says:
"Narco Dollars For Beginners" - By Catherine Austin Fitts

http://www.ratical.org/co-globalize/narcoDollars.html
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OldGreengo says:
Everyone who is knowledgable now knows marijuana is less "addictive" than coffee and FAR less harmful than alcohol. So why do we still have this barbaric persecution?
?
Because police, prosecutors and politicians build their careers and empires on it. Because industries like alcohol and pharmaceuticals don't want the competition. Because other interests like the drug treatment/testing industry and the prison industries depend on it for their life's blood. Because many shaky corporations couldn't exist without the laundered money. And because government/wealthy use marijuana prohibition as a means of controlling minorities and the poor. It's also probable the huge underground black-market funds government black-ops, as well as provide a very useful clandestine conduit for myriad dark operations. Finally, of course, the TRILLIONS of dollars made by the drug gangs have not been buried in the ground. They have been invested in legitimate business, causing another huge support of this persecution of millions of innocent people.

(See Catherine Austin Fitts "Narco Dollars For Beginners." - keeping in mind that while Fitts employs cocaine because it best suits her metaphor, FBI statistics show marijuana sales comprise 80 percent of all "illegal" drug transactions.)

It's time to declare war on the marijuana-prohibition-industrial-complex!
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OTerr says:
It worked so well in California that they're drugged up AND broke!
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OldGreengo replies:
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Nonsense. - Since marijuana is not addictive and FAR less harmful than alcohol, marijuana consumption is a vast improvement over citizenry tanked up on Napa Valley wines and all the other destructive spirits.
LogicalSoul replies:
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I love it when someone shoots their mouth off with no facts to back up their (enlightened) opinion. Chew on this OTerr: So far this year, the state [Colorado] has collected more than $2.2 million in sales tax from dispensaries. Reference: http://www.thcfarmer.com/forums/f15/colorado-collects-millions-marijuana-tax-revenue-28388/ Now if California did the same how much tax revenue to you think that state would receive? Please learn to base your opinions on facts and not bias.
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aftinc says:
This remains basicaly a right/left issue. I did research it and it appears it was started but the right. This is one step in the right dircetion, people do what they do and as long as it's not harming others I don't have a dog in the fight. My belief is the current federal law is the wrong way. A simple local permitt to grow it would eleiminate a lot of crime on all of us. This will not affect the drug cartels, they are into the heavy drugs. Making drugs legal would hurt them and at the same time take a tremendous load off our legal system. We could then create a system to help those who are hooked. They are sick, their brains have been hijacked, the hard drugs do this in a physical way and yes it is a mental issue for a user also but becasue you become physically adicted to anything does not mean you are a criminal or a bad person. In God's eye's the right thing to do when someone is sick is to help.
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Irby32 says:
Great job Conn!!! The rest of the nation applauds you and hopefully will follow in step. A common sense reform it surely is
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tomanyt says:
The title for this story is misleading.
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ammo17 says:
isn`t this the state where some guy named dukakis was governor,this will blow up in their face.
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Rodeo_Joe says:
Hat's off to the Connecticut Yankees.

...that a Government of the People, by the People, for the People, shall not perish from the earth.
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