Rachel Hoffman

Marijuana leniency starts today
By Peter Mucha, Philadelphia Inquirer

Starting today, anyone apprehended in Philadelphia with about an ounce of marijuana or less could see the charges downgraded to a summary offense.

Take a class, pay a $200 fine and any record would be expunged - that's what is likely to happen now in several thousand cases a year, said Deputy District Attorney Ed McCann.

Just don't expect hands-off treatment by police, if you're caught with a small amount of marijuana, defined as 30 grams or less.

"You're still arrested, you're still brought in, you're still fingerprinted, you're still given a prelim," said Tasha Jamerson, spokeswoman for the District Attorney's Office.

Only at the preliminary arraignment are procedures changing, as many cases will be "diverted" from misdemeanor charges, said McCann.

That won't be automatic either.

Some reasons for withholding leniency for pot possession include attempting to sell, being caught during a serious crime, and having a criminal record, McCann said.

To qualify for diverting, "we're talking about this offense being a standalone offense, or this being the most serious charge," he said.

"It should be a tremendous savings to the court system," greatly reducing police testimony, public defenders and documentation, he said.

The change in policy was announced in April by new District Attorney Seth Williams.

A vocal opponent has been his predecessor, Lynne M. Abraham, who has said, " 'Welcome to Philadelphia, Light Up a Joint' may just be our new slogan."

"Local gangs and marijuana growers everywhere are positively overjoyed," she has said.

McCann sees it differently. "It's a reasonable response to a large number of cases that don't have to be . . . clogging up the court system," he said.

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Plum woman accused of having huge stash of marijuana
By Michael Hasch, Pittsburgh Tribune-Review

confiscated marijuanaA woman's failure to pay her water bill in Plum led to the discovery of $2.7 million worth of marijuana stashed in her unit in Holiday Park Apartments.

The home of Tameicina Lynn Johnson, 38, is believed to be the "distribution hub" of a drug-dealing operation extending from Mexico to New York City, said Plum police Detective Mark Focareta. The suspect, who works for an agency that provides assistance to mentally challenged children, also has a home in Staten Island, N.Y., Focareta said.

Johnson, who is accused of having 540 pounds of marijuana in her Holiday Park apartment, has been under investigation for the past year by the Allegheny County District Attorney's Narcotics Enforcement Team, as well as police from Plum, Murrysville, Swissvale and the Port Authority, he said.

The break in the case occurred Feb. 24, when workers from the apartment complex and the Plum Borough Municipal Authority went to Johnson's home to shut off water service for nonpayment of bills, Focareta said.

"Sometimes, we pay so much attention to the big things that we ignore the little things," Focareta said. "That was her huge mistake."

The workers called police after finding six large boxes and the strong odor of unburnt marijuana in a small utility room at the rear of the garage.

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handful of mustard - may as well wax the car...

Bethlehem Police say they've made a major drug bust. And this one isn't like all the others. Investigators say they found some 90 pounds of marijuana and more than 400 grams of cocaine at a home in the 1600 block of Best Place. They served a search warrant there Tuesday and arrested 22- year-old Andres Anderson. Police say Anderson tried to suppress the smell of the pot by wrapping it in cellophane and coating it in mustard.

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