Since it is obvious most Oklahoma lawmakers don’t have any common sense, it is important you know how to protect yourself from being arrested for a marijuana crime. If you find yourself accused of a marijuana crime, call (405) 497-0480. Below are some simple tips to help you avoid finding yourself on the wrong end of some good, ol’ fashioned Oklahoma justice.

Three Tips for Avoiding Charges

1. Don’t Leave Marijuana Out in the Open

Under most circumstances, cops have to get a search warrant before they can search your home. However, if an officer sees a pipe or a baggie on a table from a place he has a right to be, he can legally seize it and arrest you. Do not smoke in public or in your car and remember to always keep your “stash” out of sight.

As Ron White says, “I had the right to remain silent, I just lacked the ability.” Many people arrested for pot charges would not have been if they had exercised their Constitutional rights. Time and time again, I have had clients simply hand their joint to the cop when he asks. If he has to ask, he doesn’t know where it is or doesn’t have enough to legally take it.

Don’t make his job easy. Cops will threaten, bully and lie to you to in an attempt to search your property. If you consent, and they find some pot, you are going to jail and any legal defense to an unlawful search is probably waived. If you refuse to let them search, they either must let you go, or try to get a search warrant.

Many times a joint or two is not worth the officer’s time and he will simply release you rather than expend the effort and time to secure a search warrant from a judge. However, if all he has to do is ask to get you to hand it over, he is that much closer to meeting his quota.

Never consent to a search or talk with an officer. If they are going to find it anyway, then they will, but don’t waive your rights, and any possible legal defense, in the process.
It is very simple to exercise these rights.

If a police officer asks to search you or your property, it is perfectly legal and acceptable to respond with: “I do not consent to a search of my (fill in the blank). If I am not under arrest, I would like to leave now.” That is all it takes, don’t answer anymore questions or allow the officer to engage you in any chit chat, shut up and walk off.

3. Don’t Answer Questions Without Your Attorney Present

There are very few deaf mutes in prison. Anything you say to anyone, with a few limited exceptions, can be used as evidence against you. You have the right to have an attorney present during questioning by law enforcement. Your 5th Amendment right to remain silent should always be exercised.

Visit our Oklahoma Marijuana Laws page to learn more and contact us if you find yourself accused of a marijuana crime.

What the Current Law Says

The Fourth Amendment to the Bill of Rights of the United States Constitution states:

“The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.”

The Fifth Amendment reads, in part,

“No person shall be… compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law….”

These Amendments were included in the Constitution to protect American citizens from the government intruding in their every-day lives without good reason. Fast forward to July of 1971 when President Richard Nixon declared what has come to be called the “War on Drugs”. Nixon told Congress that drug addiction had “assumed the dimensions of a national emergency”, and was “public enemy number one”.

Since then this “War” has raged in the streets, highways, schools and homes of Americans and has had dire consequences for every American. It is no secret this “War” has been a total disaster. The United States Supreme Court and Oklahoma Appellate Courts have slowly whittled away at the 4th and 5th Amendments until they are now a shadow of what the Founding Fathers originally had in mind. In their efforts to protect police officers, and more importantly, the steady stream of money the “War on Drugs” produces for various government entities, appellate courts have run rough shod over the rights of every American.

The “tough on crime” politicians have only exacerbated the problem. Mandatory minimum sentencing and life sentences for drug crimes have filled American prisons to the breaking point and doomed generations to a life of poverty and violence, and nowhere else is it more evident than in Oklahoma. According to The Sentencing Project, an advocacy group which works to promote reforms in sentencing policy in the United States, Oklahoma has the fourth highest incarceration rate in the country with 648 Okies in prison per 100,000 citizens, behind such enlightened states as Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana. This is well above the national average of 480 people per 100,000 citizens. Oklahoma is the leading incarcerated of women, with 63 females incarcerated per 100,000 citizens. Of those Oklahomans in prison, half are incarcerated for nonviolent property and drug offenses and 27% of the prison population in Oklahoma is incarcerated for drug crimes, the highest percentage in the country.

While there have been some efforts to try and stem the tide of Oklahomans going to prison for marijuana possession, I am not going to hold my breath. Currently Senate Bill 2116 is working its way through the Oklahoma Legislature. Senate Bill 2116, filed by Oklahoma State Senator Constance Johnson (D-Forest Park), would make it legal for individuals 21 and older to purchase, possess and consume up to 1 ounce of marijuana and establish basic rules for its cultivation and sale. This bill faces an uphill battle and it is going to be very difficult to secure the votes necessary to pass such a radical reform of Oklahoma law.

At least for now, we are stuck with the draconian marijuana laws currently in place in Oklahoma. In Oklahoma, marijuana is a Schedule I drug. Schedule I drugs are characterized as substances with a “high potential for abuse and no accepted medical use in the United States or lacks accepted safety for use in treatment under medical supervision”. The penalties for a first-time possession of marijuana are up to one (1) year in a county jail and a $1,000 fine. The second time you get caught in Oklahoma with a little weed, you are looking at between two (2) and (10) ten years in an Oklahoma prison and up to a $5,000 fine.

In addition to those very scary penalties, you can also lose your driver’s license. If you are convicted of marijuana violation while using a motor vehicle you can lose your driver’s license for six (6) months for a first offense. However, you can get a modified Driver’s License which will allow you to drive a vehicle with an ignition interlock installed in it for the time you are suspended. Think about that for a moment. Oklahoma will allow you to drive a car if you install a device that detects alcohol if you get got with pot. With laws like this on the books, it is no wonder Oklahoma is in the shape it is.

While this very short lesson on Constitutional law is meant to give you a few pointers on exercising your 4th and 5th Amendment rights, it does not and should not be a replacement for advice from an experienced criminal defense lawyer.

See the Oklahoma Marijuana Laws page to learn more and call us today at (405) 497-0480 if you need of a marijuana defense attorney.

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