Friday, February 2, 2018

San Francisco Will Clear Thousands of Marijuana Convictions

What happens when a formerly repugnant transaction goes from being illegal to being legal?
The NY Times has the story:
San Francisco Will Clear Thousands of Marijuana Convictions

"Thousands of people with misdemeanor convictions for marijuana possession dating back 40 years will have their criminal records cleared, the San Francisco district attorney’s office said Wednesday. San Diego is also forgiving old convictions.

"Recreational marijuana became legal in California this year, and the law allowed those with prior low-level offenses to petition for expungement, a process that can be costly.

"But in San Francisco and San Diego, people need not ask. George Gascón, San Francisco’s district attorney, said his office would automatically erase convictions there, which total about 3,000.

"An additional 4,900 felony marijuana charges will be examined by prosecutors to determine if they should be retroactively reduced to misdemeanors.

"San Diego has identified 4,700 cases, both felonies and misdemeanors, that will be cleared or downgraded."
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See my earlier posts on Turing's Law, named for Britain's 2003 posthumous pardon of Alan Turing who had been convicted of a crime when homosexual acts were illegal.

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