Court Upholds Law Making Marijuana Santa Barbara’s Lowest Law Enforcement Priority (7/10/2007)
"Measure P is a proper legislative enactment," Court Rules
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org
SANTA BARBARA, CA - The American Civil Liberties Union applauded today’s
ruling by a California Superior Court judge to uphold a voter-enacted initiative
that directs police to focus resources on serious crime by making marijuana use
the lowest law enforcement priority. Citing California’s ban on lawsuits that
punish public participation in the political process, the court dismissed the
city of Santa Barbara’s challenge of the law, known as Measure P, which was
brought against Heather Poet because she was the proponent of the challenged
initiative.
"Today’s ruling is a major victory for the democratic process and a
resounding affirmation of voters’ right to de-prioritize marijuana enforcement,"
said Adam Wolf, an attorney with the ACLU Drug Law Reform Project, which
represented Poet in the proceedings. "The people of Santa Barbara would rather
local law enforcement focus on combating serious crime than policing marijuana
use. Today’s ruling confirms that the voters can make this fundamentally local
decision about their community’s safety."
In addition to finding that the city of Santa Barbara’s suit against Poet
arose from "her constitutional right to participate in the process of
formulating laws" and ran afoul of California’s ban on strategic lawsuits
against public participation ("SLAPP"), the court held that neither state nor
federal law precludes localities like Santa Barbara from prioritizing the
enforcement of certain criminal offenses, including the de-prioritization of
marijuana offenses.
As the ruling states, "Nothing in [Measure P] prohibits enforcement of state
law…Police officers can still arrest those who violate drug possession laws in
their presence. The voters have simply instructed them that they have higher
priority work to do."
"Santa Barbara is free to decline to enforce federal criminal statutes," the
ruling continues. "Indeed, the Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution
prohibits the federal government from impressing ‘into its service - and at no
cost to itself - the police officers of the 50 States.’"
Measure P was passed on November 7, 2006 by over 65 percent of the
electorate. Designed to free law enforcement resources to better address violent
and serious crime, Measure P makes "investigations, citations, arrests, property
seizures, and prosecutions for adult marijuana offenses, where the marijuana was
intended for adult personal use, the city of Santa Barbara’s lowest law
enforcement priority." The measure does not de-prioritize marijuana offenses
related to public use or driving under the influence.
"It was terrifying to be sued by my own government, and for a fleeting moment
it made me feel maybe I shouldn’t have gotten involved in the democratic
process," said Poet. "But this decision proves we do have a voice and we should
never be afraid to use it. It also affirms that people in Santa Barbara, and
throughout America, can protect their communities by having police focus on
serious crime, rather than marijuana offenses."
Santa Barbara is not alone in enacting its lowest law enforcement priority
ordinance. Since 2000, at least 11 cities and counties, including seven in
California, have enacted legislation treating certain marijuana offenses as a
low or the lowest law enforcement priority.
Today’s ruling, issued by Judge Thomas Anderle of the California Superior
Court in Santa Barbara, is online at:
www.aclu.org/drugpolicy/medmarijuana/30447lgl20070710.html
The ACLU’s motion calling for a dismissal of the city of Santa Barbara’s
lawsuit is available at:
www.aclu.org/drugpolicy/decrim/29627lgl20070507.html
The full text of the Measure P initiative is available online at:
www.taxandregulate.org/sb06/Fulltext.htm
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