The Houston Chronicle, a popular source for information about the infamous Houston PD crime lab, just ran an op-ed piece on changes in policy at the Harris County Prosecutor’s Office.
What can you do with one molecule of crack? Nothing, really. It won’t get you high, and you can’t sell it. Heck: You can’t even see it. But up until now, if a police crime lab detected any amount of the drug in your possession — even that stray molecule — it’s been enough for Harris County prosecutors to charge you with a felony that could send you to state jail.
So here’s to District Attorney Pat Lykos for realizing how crazy that is. Starting Jan. 1, county prosecutors are instructed not to file felony charges for drug amounts under a hundredth of a gram.
How much is that? Barely a speck: A McDonald’s sugar packet contains 400 times more powder. But a hundredth of a gram is the absolute minimum necessary to conduct two lab tests: one for the prosecution, one for the defense. In other words, it’s the absolute minimum necessary for a fair trial.
Harris County is welcome to make any policies they like, but I’m afraid I’m going to have to interject a little truth into the apparently “pro-drug” editor’s comments.
1) 10mg of crack cocaine is no where near a “molecule”. It’s actually around 2 x 10^19 molecules of crack cocaine. So enough with the hyperbole. Heck labs can’t even detect one molecule of cocaine.
2) 100mg of crack cocaine is about the size of an average “crack rock” sold. Well it was in the Phoenix Arizona area circa 2000 when I analyzed hundreds of them per month. Then it was roughly $20 worth of crack cocaine. The 10mg they are talking about in this article is indeed a rather small amount, but it’s visible, and easy enough to manipulate for both testing and ingestion.
One of the requirements for prosecution in Arizona is if the drug was “usable”. Many crime labs here have artificially applied minimum amount of drugs that have to be present in order for it to be “usable”. This creates an interesting problem. What is “usable” (and therefor a crime) on one side of the street (Phoenix for example) isn’t on the other side of the street (Scottsdale for example). If the drug wasn’t “usable” the person carrying it probably wouldn’t keep it.
Depending on what your state laws are, it really isn’t how much of the drug is present, just it’s presence. And it certainly isn’t tied to whether or not there is enough there for someone to “get high” off of.
Certainly crime labs and prosecutors offices can shift resources however they feel the local community would best be served. Just don’t use misinformation to try and prove your point.
Read the entire Houston Chronicle article here.
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