SACRAMENTO, Calif. (April 15, 2021) – Yesterday, a second California Senate committee passed a bill that would legalize possession of several psychedelic drugs including LSD and “magic mushrooms” despite federal prohibition on the same.

Sen. Scott Weiner (D-San Francisco) introduced Senate Bill 519 (SB519) on Feb. 17. The legislation would make lawful the possession and personal use of the following substances by adults 21 and over.

  • psilocybin
  • psilocyn
  • MDMA
  • LSD
  • ketamine
  • DMT
  • mescaline (excluding peyote)
  • ibogaine

Under the proposed law “social sharing” of these substances would be legal.

On April 14, the Senate Committee on Health passed SB519 by a 5-2 vote. Earlier this month, the Senate Committee on Public Safety passed the measure by a 4-1 vote.

“The war on drugs has been an abject failure because it is based on the false belief, the false notion, that criminalizing people, arresting them, incarcerating them for possessing, for using drugs, will somehow deter use and improve public safety,” Wiener told colleagues before the vote. “It has done neither.”

SB519 includes expungement provisions that would dismiss and seal pending and prior convictions for offenses that would be made lawful by the passage of the bill.

“Policy should be based on science and common sense, not fear and stigma,” Wiener said in a press release. “The War on Drugs and mass incarceration are destructive and failed policies, and we must end them. Moreover, given the severity of our mental health crisis, we shouldn’t be criminalizing people for using drugs that have shown significant promise in treating mental health conditions.”

The introduction of SB519 follows a successful ballot measure that decriminalized a number of drugs, including heroin and cocaine in Oregon.

Last year, Ann Arbor became the third city in the U.S. to decriminalize “magic mushrooms.” Oakland and Denver have also effectively decriminalized psilocybin – a substance hallucinogenic substance found in certain mushrooms.  A number of studies have shown psilocybin to be effective in the treatment of depression, PTSD, chronic pain and addiction. For instance, a Johns Hopkins study found that “psilocybin produces substantial and sustained decreases in depression and anxiety in patients with life-threatening cancer.”

Decriminalization efforts at the state and local level are moving forward despite the federal government’s prohibition of these various substances.

LEGALITY

Under the Controlled Substances Act (CSA) passed in 1970, the federal government maintains the complete prohibition of many of the drugs on SB519’s decriminalization list and heavily regulates others. Of course, the federal government lacks any constitutional authority to ban or regulate such substances within the borders of a state, despite the opinion of the politically connected lawyers on the Supreme Court. If you doubt this, ask yourself why it took a constitutional amendment to institute federal alcohol prohibition.

In effect, the passage of SB519 would end criminal enforcement of laws prohibiting the possession of these drugs in California. As we’ve seen with marijuana and hemp, when states and localities stop enforcing laws banning a substance, the federal government finds it virtually impossible to maintain prohibition. For instance, FBI statistics show that law enforcement makes approximately 99 of 100 marijuana arrests under state, not federal law. By curtailing or ending state prohibition, states sweep part of the basis for 99 percent of marijuana arrests.

Furthermore, figures indicate it would take 40 percent of the DEA’s yearly annual budget just to investigate and raid all of the dispensaries in Los Angeles – a single city in a single state. That doesn’t include the cost of prosecution either. The lesson? The feds lack the resources to enforce marijuana prohibition without state and local assistance, and the same will likely hold true with other drugs.

WHAT’S NEXT

SB519 now moves to the Senate Appropriations Committee where it must pass by a majority vote before moving forward in the legislative process.

Mike Maharrey

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