Connecticut Legislature Votes to Defelonize Personal Drug Possession, Governor to Sign Measure Into Law

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Connecticut Legislature Votes to Defelonize Personal Drug Possession, Governor to Sign Measure Into Law

By Associated Press

connConnecticut’s drug laws will go from some of the most draconian in the country to some of the most lenient this fall when most drug possession crimes are reduced from felonies to misdemeanors, a change that’s increasingly finding common ground between Democrats and Republicans.

Possession of small amounts of hard drugs including heroin, cocaine and crack cocaine — crimes that currently could land an offender in prison for up to seven years for a first offense — would be dialed back to a misdemeanor. And a mandatory two-year prison term for possessing drugs within 1,500 feet of a school — a law decried by civil liberties advocates as among the worst in the country — will be eliminated.

The legislation approved with bipartisan support Monday is part of a movement in both liberal and conservative states to save hundreds of millions of dollars in prison costs by not incarcerating low-level, nonviolent offenders.


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“The cycle our system currently encourages — one of permanent punishment — hurts too many families and communities,” Democratic Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, a former prosecutor who proposed the changes, said in a statement. “These are smart criminal justice initiatives that are working in states throughout the country — both red and blue.”

In May, Republican governors in Nebraska and Alabama signed new laws that will reduce future prison costs for each state by more than $300 million by not locking up so many people for committing minor crimes and possessing small amounts of drugs. Officials in several other states are considering similar measures.

Voters in blue-leaning California and officials in Utah —where Republicans control the governor’s office and the legislature — both approved making possession of small amounts of drugs including heroin and cocaine a misdemeanor in the last year.

Connecticut, which decriminalized small amounts of marijuana in 2011, now becomes the third state to make such a change, said Theshia Naidoo, senior staff attorney at the Drug Policy Alliance, a New York-based nonprofit group.

“People are reevaluating our punitive drug policies,” Naidoo said. “Clearly we’ve had over 40 years of imposing very harsh penalties.”

Thirteen other states classified possession of small amounts of drugs as misdemeanors when they wrote their drug laws years ago, Naidoo said. Those states do not include states that have legalized marijuana for recreational or medicinal use, but consider possession of other drugs felonies, she said.

Connecticut’s current law carries up to seven years in prison for a first conviction for possessing narcotics including heroin, cocaine and crack cocaine and up to 25 years in prison for third and subsequent convictions.

The new law, most of which takes effect Oct. 1, would reduce possessing small amounts of drugs to misdemeanors carrying up to one year in prison for a first offense. Judges will be able to suspend prosecutions for a second misdemeanor offense and order drug treatment. A third or subsequent misdemeanor conviction would be considered a felony carrying up to three years in prison.

The school-zone provision will still apply within 1,500 feet of a school and still require some jail time, but will now be classified as a misdemeanor with a maximum sentence of one year behind bars.

All 50 states have drug-free school zone laws, and at least seven have moved to reform them in recent years, according to The Sentencing Project, a research and advocacy group in Washington, D.C.

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