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Tracking Down Those Unicorns

stoned_unicorn.jpg

Last week White House appointee John Walters claimed on C-SPAN that finding people in jail for “first-time nonviolent possession of marijuana… is like finding a unicorn … because it doesn’t exist.” I had a hunch that some of the 775,138 people arrested for pot possession last year were actually unicorns…

But the drug czar probably assumed that it’s a freebie to call people with criminal convictions anything he wants, because they’re likely to be too ashamed to defend themselves. That’s certainly true, but it didn’t take me long to find credible people willing to vouch for the existence of first-time, non-violent marijuana offenders—excuse me, unicorns.

In just one hour, I’ve found five people who have seen the Drug Czar’s unicorns with their own eyes. Here are Slog’s exclusive unicorn reports:

Andy Robertson, criminal defense attorney for 10 years at the Rosen Law Firm in Seattle.

I have had it happen where [my client] goes to jail where they have one joint on them, and they have never gone to jail before. This is their first and only brush with the law. I don’t think that I have ever had a case where the person charged for marijuana is anything but the most peaceful person you can imagine.

A judge who I spoke to recently said that about every afternoon, he’ll put at least one person a day in jail for possession of marijuana or paraphernalia. He’s bee pro tem-ing for at least five years.

Sunil Abraham, public defender for the King County Defender Association. When asked how many people he has personally encountered with no prior record who have served time in jail for a nonviolent marijuana-possession charge, here’s what he said:

I’d say 50 people and they have all done time in jail. I’d guess that if you obtained the booking history for the last 100 marijuana arrests for somebody who has no criminal history, 80 percent of them do time in jail. It may be one day, but they serve time in jail. [Police] don’t commonly arrest for marijuana and release; you are going to go to jail.

Alison Holcomb, drug policy director of the ACLU of Washington.

According to data compiled by the Washington Association of Sheriffs and Police Chiefs and requested by the ACLU of Washington, Washington police agencies reported 11,553 arrests for possession of marijuana in 2007. Misdemeanor possession of marijuana carries a mandatory day in jail, and up to ninety. Data obtained from the Washington State Patrol’s Identification and Criminal History Section reveals that 3,588 convictions for misdemeanor marijuana possession were entered in Washington courts in 2007.

Muraco Kyashana-tocha, works in the law offices of Jeffrey Steinborn and Douglas Hiatt, the city’s leading marijuana-defense attorneys.

I know of two cases that were handled … in the last year. They were both over in Redmond. I know both of them by name. One gram [possessed] by one of them, and 12 grams by the other one. They were squeaky clean: no record no juvenile record. I know a lot of people who went to jail while their case was processing. They may be in jail over the weekend for three days. A lot of the people charged with misdemeanor [possession] cannot afford $3000-5000 for legal representation, so they are doing time.

Jeffrey Steinborn, the city’s leading marijuana defense attorney.

Walters is either shamefully ignorant, or intentionally lying to us. Sometimes we get lucky because a big shot in white shirt shows up. Sometimes the prosecutor will say the statute is mandatory, so they say, “Fuck you, your client’s going to jail.” Sometimes the judge will convert that to community service but the law says they can’t. To avoid that day in jail is the exception rather than the rule.

Surely, more of these magical animals walk among us. Have you seen a unicorn? Are you a unicorn? Put your unicorn-sighting story in comments or send me an email.

Comments (13)

1

It's alot easier to talk your way into jail than out of........I've been in several compromising situations where a little respect for the officer in question, even though I detest the police state, saved my arse from any citation at all. plus one sk8brding ticket with 1.5 lbs in the backpack, no smartass, no running from the cops, no search incidental to arrest, no felony!

Live to toke another day

Posted by polite to copz guys | September 18, 2008 2:22 PM
2

A friend of mine spent the night in jail for a joint. Cop stopped him on the street (for being loud and obnoxious), searched him, and took him away. He ultimately wasn't sentenced to any time, just a fine.

Oh, this was in Florida. Duh.

Posted by Dougsf | September 18, 2008 2:49 PM
3

didn't the drug czar douche guy say he would buy that reporter a steak dinner? that is if he could locate something that everyone knows exists...

Posted by douglas | September 18, 2008 2:52 PM
4

my baby brother is a unicorn.

Posted by j bomb | September 18, 2008 2:52 PM
5

I'm a unicorn! I was caught with a fat j in my pocket and spent two nights in an Austin jail. When brought before the judge I was charged with "possession of a bag with the intent to use it to contain a controlled substance." Since I thought that I would be charged with marijuana possession, this odd charge against the empty bags that I tended to carry with me seemed the more benign. And at that point all I wanted was to get the funk out of Texas. So I plead guilty with no legal consult, received time served, and continued my adventure.

Last year I immigrated to Australia and had to submit my FBI file in my application. Though I had accepted that weird empty bag charge in court, my record has a marijuana possession charge. I contacted the Austin courts, and they didn't keep my court case on file, so I'm stuck with the possession charge.

I'm a unicorn!

Posted by Mrs. Jarvie | September 18, 2008 3:33 PM
6

My favorite thing about philosophy classes in college was the constant references to/examples using unicorns. What better way to illustrate a Platonic ideal?

Posted by Chris | September 18, 2008 3:42 PM
7

My favorite thing about philosophy classes in college was the constant references to/examples using unicorns. What better way to illustrate a Platonic ideal?

Posted by Chris | September 18, 2008 3:43 PM
8

If there were any real justice, this administration would be in jail.

Posted by Vince | September 18, 2008 3:55 PM
9

The whole drug war is a lie, why would we expect its apologist-in-chief to be anything but a big fat fucking liar?

You know, like every single member of the administration that hired him.

Posted by Mr. X | September 18, 2008 4:23 PM
10

The drug czar is so bad he's making more people think they is unicorns than the notorious schedule 1 drug marijuana.Or black gunnion if you're Iceberg Slim.

Posted by randy beaver | September 18, 2008 5:42 PM
11

@5 How can that be? How can you have been charged for an empty bag and then for that charge to stick when there was no record of it??? Don't the cops have to keep records?

Posted by idaho | September 18, 2008 11:37 PM
12

the drug czar asswipe used some clever verbal slight of hand. The questioner referred to the large # of peole that have been arrested for simple possesion. Asswipe replied with (paraphrasing) "find a unicorn in jail" blahblahblah.

This misses the fucking point! People should not be ARRESTED for having a goddamn motherfucking joint! forget about how few actually make it to jail, people should be left alone. you know, freedom and all that shit.

Posted by Mike in MO | September 19, 2008 8:07 AM
13

Rhinos are white trash unicorns

Posted by bobcat | September 19, 2008 1:32 PM

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