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  • 2018-09-26 (xsd:date)
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  • Mike DeWine misleads about Issue 1, the drug amendment in Ohio (en)
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  • Republican Mike DeWine says Democrat Richard Cordray is soft on drug dealers in Ohio, a state hit hard by the opioid crisis . Cordray’s plan would allow drug dealers to remain on our streets, says DeWine’s TV ad . Even when they are caught with enough fentanyl to kill 10,000 people. The same drug that is killing Ohioans every day. Cordray’s plan would create a safe haven for drug dealers. The ad refers to Corday’s support for Issue 1 , a constitutional amendment that would reduce possession offenses to misdemeanors. DeWine, the attorney general, opposes the amendment . The question will appear on the November ballot when DeWine and Cordray face off for governor. We found that DeWine miscasts what the amendment would do and omits what Cordray has said about drug dealers. Key takeaways: • This isn’t Cordray’s plan, although he supports the amendment. • Cordray has said drug dealers should serve long sentences. • The amendment reduces possession of drugs to a misdemeanor. • The amendment states that drug trafficking would remain a felony. Issue 1 on November ballot If adopted, the amendment would reclassify drug possession -- including fentanyl -- as a misdemeanor and prohibit jail time until an individual's third offense within two years. Also, those already convicted of possession could ask a court to reduce their conviction to a misdemeanor. Felons, with some exceptions for certain offenses, could get a 25 percent reduction in prison time if they participate in rehabilitative, work or educational programs. Money that is saved from imprisonment would go toward rehabilitation and crime victim funds. But the amendment doesn’t let drug traffickers, a.k.a. dealers, off the hook. It states that the misdemeanor provisions do not apply to convictions for the sale, distribution, or trafficking of drugs or for convictions based on volume or weight that were classified as a first-, second-, or third-degree felony offense. That leaves fourth- and fifth-degree felony possessions to be reclassified misdemeanors, which the DeWine campaign says would include fentanyl, which is deadly in small amounts. DeWine’s campaign points to an op-ed against the amendment by Chief Justice of the Ohio Supreme Court Maureen O’Connor who said an offender charged with possession of 19 grams of fentanyl would only receive a misdemeanor. Since the lethal dose of fentanyl is just 2 milligrams, 19 grams of fentanyl is enough to kill about 10,000 people, she wrote. But the key here is the word possession. Defendants who deal drugs can still be charged with felony trafficking, said Ohio State University Law professor Doug Berman, executive director of the Drug Enforcement and Policy Center. This is not about giving drug dealers a break; this is about freeing up resources to provide treatment to reduce the demand for the drugs, Berman said. The amendment will make prosecutors jobs harder -- they will no longer be able to only charge defendants with possession and send them to prison. Instead, they will have to prove trafficking, which involves additional elements beyond just merely possession -- and would mean that prosecutors would be putting their undercover officers on the stand. Ohio Prosecuting Attorneys Association argues the amendment may prevent felony charges for traffickers who deliberately deal in small amounts so that they can assert simple possession as a defense. Kenneth R. Bailey
, president of the Ohio Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, said someone caught with a small amount of fentanyl could be charged with misdemeanor possession. But DeWine still isn’t telling the full story. In practice, trafficking is an often used companion charge to possession, Bailey said. If Issue 1 passes, there is nothing that prevents a prosecutor from bringing the misdemeanor possession count with a companion felony trafficking (charge). Generally, trafficking is not defined by the amount of the drug, but the purpose for which the possessor is going to use the drug, he said. In one case , a defendant was charged with trafficking for 10 grams of heroin and aggravated trafficking for possessing a bag containing less than a gram of heroin and fentanyl. The defense lawyers association is supporting Issue 1 with reservations, including the form of its implementation as an amendment and the removal of judicial discretion. Cordray’s comments about the amendment DeWine’s ad says it is Cordray’s plan to let the drug dealers go free. While Cordray has stated support for Issue 1 , it isn’t his plan. Advocates collected signatures to place it on the ballot. Also, DeWine is ignoring that Cordray has distinguished between penalties he wants to see for users and drug dealers. Cordray has said , As governor, I will work with law enforcement to make sure drug dealers are convicted and serve long prison sentences, while people who need substance abuse treatment can get it in our communities. At least 11 states as of January 2018 have lowered some drug possession crimes from a felony to a misdemeanor, said Alison Lawrence, who tracks drug laws for the National Conference of State Legislatures . Our ruling DeWine’s ad says Cordray’s plan would allow drug dealers to remain on our streets. Issue 1 would lower possession to a misdemeanor and prohibit jail time until an individual's third offense within two years. That could apply to someone in possession of fentanyl, which is deadly in small amounts. Cordray supports the amendment, but it's a far stretch to call it his plan. Most importantly, the amendment still leaves drug trafficking as a felony, and that includes trafficking of fentanyl. Nothing about the proprosal allows drug dealers to remain on the streets if prosecutors prove the charge in a court of law. We rate this claim False. https://www.sharethefacts.co/share/42acfe10-9795-4cb6-a455-87bfe9d9f207 (en)
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