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Paxton's case against Austin decriminalizing weed was dismissed. What does it mean for Denton?

Proposition B takes center stage in November for Denton residents to determine if police should officially ignore low-level marijuana possession, directed by a new city ordinance that seeks to bring common-sense cannabis reform to Denton.
Maria Crane
/
DRC
Proposition B takes center stage in November for Denton residents to determine if police should officially ignore low-level marijuana possession, directed by a new city ordinance that seeks to bring common-sense cannabis reform to Denton.

A new twist developed Wednesday in the fate of Denton鈥檚 ordinance deprioritizing marijuana enforcement.

Last week, Travis County District Judge Jan Soifer dismissed Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton鈥檚 lawsuit against the city of Austin over an ordinance to deprioritize misdemeanor marijuana enforcement due to lack of jurisdiction.

Paxton filed lawsuits in January against Austin and four other cities 鈥 Denton, Elgin, Killeen and San Marcos 鈥 over their marijuana ordinances that he claimed violated state law.

Ground Game Texas, an Austin-based nonprofit behind the marijuana ordinances, has called Paxton鈥檚 lawsuits 鈥渁n anti-democratic assault on the constitutional authority of Texas Home Rule cities to set local law enforcement priorities.鈥

鈥淚n each of the cities sued, a supermajority of voters adopted a policy to deprioritize marijuana enforcement in order to reduce racially-biased law enforcement outcomes and save scarce public resources for higher priority public safety needs,鈥 Julie Oliver, executive director for Ground Game Texas, said in a late January news release.

Ground Game Texas followed the early February lead of Decriminalize Denton, a local nonprofit behind Denton鈥檚 marijuana ordinance, and filed a plea in intervention in Paxton鈥檚 lawsuit against Austin in May, two years after 85% of voters approved Austin鈥檚 marijuana ordinance.

Before the Austin-based nonprofit鈥檚 plea could be heard, Soifer dismissed Paxton鈥檚 lawsuit and granted Austin鈥檚 plea to jurisdiction on June 12, as Denton attorney Richard Gladden told the Denton Record-Chronicle on Thursday afternoon.

Gladden is representing Decriminalize Denton and former Denton City Council member Deb Armintor.

鈥淧rocedurally, the judge followed settled law and the judge in Denton County didn鈥檛 鈥 at the behest of the attorney general鈥檚 office,鈥 Gladden said.

In late May, District Judge Crystal Levonius of the 481st District Court decided to move forward with Gladden鈥檚 original petition in intervention 鈥 instead of determining whether she had jurisdiction 鈥 and struck down Gladden鈥檚 petition.

Now, in light of Soifer鈥檚 recent ruling, Gladden said he plans to file a motion to vacate Levonius鈥 late May ruling as soon as the next court hearing has been set.

Gladden said the case would be over by now if Levonious had ruled on jurisdiction, like he said she is required to do, before doing anything else.

Not ruling on jurisdiction first, Gladden said, causes any other motion the judge rules on to be null and void if it鈥檚 determined that the state nor the court has jurisdiction.

Gladden said he plans to appeal if his motion to vacate isn鈥檛 granted.

In a statement on Monday, Armintor pointed out that Decriminalize Denton was happy to learn Soifer had ruled district courts in Texas do not have jurisdiction to consider Paxton鈥檚 challenge to the ordinances that deprioritized misdemeanor marijuana cases.

鈥淚t鈥檚 unfortunate that our District Judge in Denton County ruled to strike Decrim Denton鈥檚 intervention in the Denton case without first determining whether the Denton County Court even has jurisdiction,鈥 Armintor said in the statement. 鈥淲e objected to this sequence of events before the Court in Denton, and we intend to file a motion to reconsider with the Denton County Court.鈥

Gladden argued in a March 18 court document that, under the state constitution, neither Paxton nor the district court has standing to challenge or have jurisdiction to render an 鈥渁dvisory 0pinion鈥 on the legality of a municipal policy or ordinance that never has been and likely never will be applied by the city of Denton or Denton police.

Despite more than 70% of Denton voters passing the marijuana ordinance, also known as 鈥淧roposition B,鈥 in early November 2022, Denton police have not been deprioritizing misdemeanor marijuana cases.

Between early November 2022 and April 2024, Denton police have issued 223 citations or arrests and cited and arrested 43 people, according to the most recent data available on the city鈥檚 website.

Denton鈥檚 marijuana ordinance also doesn鈥檛 have the support of the city manager鈥檚 office or the majority of council members, who declined to pass a similar ordinance in June 2023.

City Manager Sara Hensley issued a detailed memo early on Nov. 9, 2022, the day after the ordinance passed, to proclaim that the city would not be following what voters wanted.

鈥淚鈥檝e said it a thousand times and I鈥檒l say it again, I do not direct the police chief. He gets his oath from the state of Texas,鈥 Hensley told council members in early March 2023. 鈥淚 could tell him to break the law, but that is not what I will do as a professional.鈥

It鈥檚 why Gladden argued in a Feb. 5 court document that it was important for Armintor and Decriminalize Denton to become defendants in the case given the city鈥檚 negative stance on the ordinance.

鈥淚t is also likely Defendant City of Denton will align itself with the interests advocated by Plaintiff State of Texas in this case,鈥 Gladden wrote in February. 鈥淚ndeed, based on its prior conduct, Defendant City of Denton can reasonably be expected, in due course, to overtly or covertly collude with Plaintiff State of Texas in an attempt to acquire an outcome in this case that serves only their mutually shared interests, and not the interests of Intervenors.鈥

Dustin Sternbeck, the city鈥檚 chief communications officer, declined to discuss the case due to pending litigation.

Elgin, which is represented in its case by the same law firm representing Denton, is working toward Paxton鈥檚 goals, Gladden said.

On May 24, Elgin city officials agreed with Paxton鈥檚 demands and will be making the voter-approved ordinance to deprioritize misdemeanor marijuana null and void, according to a May 28 court document.

In Elgin鈥檚 case, the district judge hasn鈥檛 signed off on the settlement agreement yet.

Gladden said that the judge is waiting until the July 10 court hearing to issue his rulings on the settlement agreement and Paxton鈥檚 request to strike Decriminalize Elgin鈥檚 petition to intervene.

鈥淭he judge would have to approve jurisdiction first before he can approve the settlement,鈥 Gladden said.