Most-Cited Judge In America Criticizes Drug War As ‘Absurd’

Judge Richard A. Posner of the influential Seventh U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago “is an intellectual giant who is the most-cited judge in America,” reports Larry Bodine at Lawyers.com . “His call for legalization is considered significant because Posner is considered a legal conservative,” Bodine wrote. “I don’t think we should have a fraction of the drug laws that we have,” Posner said. “I think it’s really absurd to be criminalizing possession or use or distribution of marijuana. I can’t see any difference between that and cigarettes.” A widely respected federal judge called for the legalization of marijuana in a lecture at Elmhurst College in Illinois on Thursday.

The Elmhurst College audience applauded Judge Posner’s remarks.

Posner, who was called a “genius” by Judge William J. Bauer by way of introducing him, has written hundreds of court opinions and 40 books. Entire classes at law schools are devoted to his legal rulings.

A Reagan appointee, he attended Yale College, was valedictorian of his class at Harvard Law School and started his career as a clerk for the U.S. Supreme Court.

Judge Posner said he was also skeptical about laws regarding other drugs besides cannabis.

“The notion of using the criminal law as the primary means of dealing with a problem of addiction, of misuse, of ingesting dangerous drugs — I don’t think that’s sensible at all,” Posner said.

According to Posner, drug laws are “responsible for a high percentage of our prisoners. And these punishments are often very, very severe. It’s all very expensive.”

Posner pointed out in 2010 that legalizing marijuana and other drugs would save federal, state and local governments an estimated $41.3 billion a year.

The Nation. His tendency to use pictures — often taken from the web — to spice up his rulings is a rarity in a legal world where staid, dry documents are customary. Posner has been criticized by stuffed-shirts for making his rulings look a bit like a graphic novel, using pictures of reggae icon Bob Marley, lions, ostriches and other images to underscore his opinions, according to. His tendency to use pictures — often taken from the web — to spice up his rulings is a rarity in a legal world where staid, dry documents are customary.