According to Al Jazeera America, Amendment 64 decriminalized marijuana possession up to an ounce. A woman’s 2011 conviction for possessing the drug was under appeal when the panel of judges decided to overturn the conviction because of a “significant change in the law.”
Brandi Jessica Russell’s defense attorney, Brian Emerson, told the judges Thursday that Amendment 64 should be applied retroactively, which the panel agreed with because they said there are some legal exceptions.
“The general presumption of prospective application, however, is subject to a doctrine established by our General Assembly and Supreme Court enabling a defendant to benefit retroactively from a significant change in the law,” Judge Mary Hoak said in her 16-page opinion.
Russell was convicted in Grand County for the possession of one gram or less of methamphetamine, marijuana concentrate possession and possession of less than one ounce of marijuana.
Brian Vicente, one of Amendment 64’s authors, said the judges’ ruling could ultimately affect hundreds of Coloradoans who were sentenced to jail terms for petty marijuana possession, while some inmates currently serving time could also be released. He also said that prior to the amendment, the state had prosecuted about 9,000 marijuana possession cases a year.