A drug charge is not a verdict. It's a starting position.

Most New Jersey drug cases turn on the search, the inference of intent, and which diversion door is open. A capable defense attorney works all three.

A drug arrest feels like the end of something. It is actually the start of a process — and the process has more handholds than most people realize. Was the stop legal? Was the search legal? Is the lab analysis defensible? Is there a path to PTI, Drug Court, or a downgrade? The job of a New Jersey drug defense attorney is to work through every one of those questions in order, methodically, before anyone signs a plea.

New Jersey's CDS statutes

Drug offenses are governed by the Comprehensive Drug Reform Act of 1987, codified at N.J.S.A. 2C:35-1source through 2C:35-28source. The Act schedules controlled dangerous substances by abuse potential, accepted medical use, and safety profile. Schedule I substances (heroin, LSD, MDMA) sit at the top of the abuse-potential ladder; Schedule V at the bottom. The schedule of the substance, the quantity involved, and the nature of the alleged conduct together determine how the offense is graded and what penalties attach.

At Simon Law Group, our criminal defense attorneys have represented clients facing a broad range of CDS charges, including possession, distribution, and conspiracy allegations. The work is the same: examine the search, examine the lab analysis, examine the State's theory of intent, and use the diversion programs the statute provides.

Possession versus distribution

Almost every charging decision in a drug case runs through one question: did the person merely possess the substance, or did they intend to distribute it? The answer separates a third- or fourth-degree exposure from a first- or second-degree one, and it usually turns not on a witnessed sale but on what the police inferred from the surrounding circumstances. Because so much rides on a line the State often draws by inference, contesting where a case falls on that line is one of the most valuable things a defense can do.

Simple possession — N.J.S.A. 2C:35-10source

Possession of a Schedule I, II, III, or IV substance is a third-degree crime, exposing a defendant to three to five years in state prison and fines up to $35,000. Possession of a Schedule V substance is fourth-degree. Possession of small amounts of marijuana above legal recreational limits or paraphernalia may be charged as a disorderly persons offense in municipal court.

To prove possession, the State must show the defendant knowingly or purposely obtained or held the substance with awareness of its nature. Possession can be actual (on the person) or constructive (the defendant had the ability and intention to control it, without it being physically on them). Constructive possession cases — drugs found in a shared vehicle, shared apartment, or a passenger's belongings — are often the most defensible, because the State carries the burden of tying the substance to a specific person and must rule out the other people who had equal access to the space.

Distribution and possession with intent — N.J.S.A. 2C:35-5source

Manufacturing, distributing, or dispensing a CDS — or possessing with intent to distribute — is graded by substance and quantity:

  • First degree: Distribution of five or more ounces of heroin, cocaine, or methamphetamine carries ten to twenty years in prison with a mandatory minimum of one-third to one-half of the sentence before parole eligibility.
  • Second degree: Distribution of one-half ounce to five ounces of heroin or cocaine carries five to ten years. (Unlicensed cannabis distribution is treated separately under the post-CREAMMA framework, not on the heroin/cocaine weight tiers.)
  • Third degree: Distribution of less than one-half ounce of heroin or cocaine, or smaller quantities of other CDS, carries three to five years.

The State proves intent circumstantially in most cases: quantity inconsistent with personal use, packaging into individual sale units, scales, baggies, large amounts of cash, multiple phones, and text or social-media communications suggesting sales. The defense work is to attack each piece of that mosaic and push for the lesser-included possession charge when the facts allow.

The important point is that none of those facts is intent. They are circumstances a jury is asked to read intent into, and each one usually has an innocent or competing explanation: a quantity consistent with a heavy personal habit, cash from a paycheck or a side job, a second phone for work. The defense does not need to prove the alternative — it needs to show that the State's inference is not the only reasonable one. Where that doubt holds, the realistic exposure can move from a distribution charge down to simple possession, and from there a diversion path often comes into view.

The school zone enhancement

Under N.J.S.A. 2C:35-7source, a person who distributes, dispenses, or possesses with intent to distribute a CDS within 1,000 feet of school property — or on a school bus — faces a mandatory minimum of one-third to one-half of the sentence or three years, whichever is greater. The statute applies regardless of whether school is in session, whether children are present, or whether the defendant knew the location was a school zone.

Because the 1,000-foot radii around schools overlap heavily in dense urban areas, the protected zones cover much of the residential and commercial map — which is why a school zone count appears in so many cases that have no real connection to a school. That gap between the statute's reach and the conduct it was meant to punish is where the defense works: the accuracy of the distance measurement, the prosecutor's office methodology for school zone mapping, and arguments for downgrade under N.J.S.A. 2C:35-7(b)source where the conduct did not in fact endanger schoolchildren.

Drug Court — intensive treatment diversion

New Jersey Drug Court, codified at N.J.S.A. 2C:35-14source, offers eligible defendants an alternative to prison through intensive court-supervised treatment. The program combines mandated treatment, frequent drug testing, regular judicial review, and graduated sanctions and incentives. Eligibility extends to many drug offenders and to defendants charged with certain drug-driven property crimes, with statutory bars on most first- and second-degree offenses involving violence. The program runs approximately five years. Drug Court is a sentence of special probation rather than a dismissal — but upon successful completion, the court may order expungement of the conviction and related records under N.J.S.A. 2C:35-14(m). For the right defendant, Drug Court can be the outcome that addresses both the criminal case and the addiction pattern driving it.

Because Drug Court is demanding and Drug Court is not a dismissal, it is not the right answer in every case. For a defendant whose charge is genuinely addiction-driven and who is prepared for five years of structure, it can be the path that resolves the case and the underlying problem at once. For a defendant who has a viable suppression motion or a weak intent case, fighting the charge may be the better course. Choosing between those paths — and sometimes preserving the option to fall back on diversion if the motion does not land — is part of the strategy at the outset, not an afterthought.

Pretrial Intervention (PTI) for drug offenses

PTI under N.J.S.A. 2C:43-12source is the standard diversion for first-time indictable offenders. The defendant completes a period of supervised probation, typically one to three years, with conditions that may include treatment, drug testing, community service, and reporting. Successful completion dismisses the case. PTI is particularly powerful for third- and fourth-degree drug offenses without a prior record. Admission is not automatic — the prosecutor weighs the statutory factors and may object — which is why the application matters. A strong PTI packet addresses each criterion specifically and presents the strongest case for the diversion path.

How these cases are actually defended

  • Fourth Amendment suppression. If the stop, frisk, search, or warrant fails constitutional scrutiny, the drugs can be suppressed under the exclusionary rule — and a drug case stripped of the drugs is often a case the State cannot prove. That is why the suppression motion is usually the first and most consequential fight: vehicle searches, plain-view doctrine, consent quality, scope of Terry stops, search-warrant affidavit sufficiency, and the automobile exception are all live battlegrounds.
  • Constructive possession defenses. When drugs are found in a shared space, the State must prove knowledge and the intention to exercise control — not merely proximity. Multiple occupants, multiple possible possessors, and the absence of fingerprints or DNA all cut against the State's case.
  • Lab analysis challenges. The substance must be proved to be a CDS through laboratory analysis under chain-of-custody protocols. We review lab reports for chain-of-custody gaps, calibration history, and analyst credentials, and we require the analyst to be available for cross-examination at trial.
  • Challenging intent to distribute. Quantity alone does not prove intent. We challenge the State's reliance on circumstantial inference and present alternative explanations consistent with personal use, particularly where the defendant has documented substance use history.
  • Confidential informant reliability. Many drug investigations rely on informant tips. We challenge the credibility of the informant, the adequacy of corroboration, and — where appropriate — seek disclosure of the informant's identity for cross-examination.

Frequently asked questions

What's the difference between possession and possession with intent to distribute?

Possession is for personal use. Intent to distribute carries far higher penalties and is usually proved by quantity, packaging, scales, cash, and phones — not a confession.

Simple possession of a controlled dangerous substance is prosecuted under N.J.S.A. 2C:35-10source. Possession with intent to distribute — or actual distribution — is prosecuted under N.J.S.A. 2C:35-5source, with sharply higher penalties depending on the substance and quantity. Because few cases involve an actual hand-to-hand sale, intent is often proved by circumstantial evidence: the quantity, packaging into multiple smaller units, scales, large amounts of cash, multiple cell phones, and text-message content suggesting sales. A central defense move in many cases is challenging that circumstantial inference and pushing the State down to the lesser possession charge.

Is recreational marijuana really legal in New Jersey now?

For adults 21+, possession up to six ounces is legal. Distribution outside the licensed system, possession in school zones, and use by minors are still prosecuted.

Following the Cannabis Regulatory, Enforcement Assistance, and Marketplace Modernization (CREAMM) Act and constitutional amendment, adults 21 and over may lawfully possess up to six ounces of cannabis and purchase from licensed dispensaries. But unlicensed distribution remains prosecutable, distribution to a minor carries enhanced penalties, possession on school grounds or while driving can still be prosecuted, and possession by anyone under 21 remains subject to a graduated warning system. Prior marijuana convictions may also be eligible for expungement under post-legalization statutes.

What's the school zone law and does it really apply if no kids are around?

N.J.S.A. 2C:35-7 enhances penalties for distribution within 1,000 feet of school property. It applies whether school is in session or not — and whether you knew where you were.

The school zone enhancement under N.J.S.A. 2C:35-7source attaches mandatory minimum prison time to distribution or possession with intent to distribute within 1,000 feet of school property or on a school bus. The statute does not require that school be in session, that children be present, or that the defendant knew the location was within a school zone. In dense urban areas, overlapping 1,000-foot radii cover much of the commercial and residential map — meaning the school zone charge appears in many cases. Defense work focuses on the accuracy of the distance measurement, the methodology used by the prosecutor's office, and arguments for downgrade under N.J.S.A. 2C:35-7(b)source.

Can I get into Drug Court instead of going to prison?

If you're eligible, yes. Drug Court swaps prison for about five years of intensive court-supervised treatment — it is special probation, not a dismissal — and completion can make the conviction eligible for expungement.

New Jersey's Drug Court program, codified at N.J.S.A. 2C:35-14source, offers eligible defendants an alternative to incarceration through intensive treatment, frequent drug testing, regular judicial review, and graduated sanctions and incentives. Eligibility extends to many drug offenders and to defendants charged with certain drug-driven property crimes, with carve-outs that bar most first- and second-degree offenses involving violence. The program runs five years and is rigorous — relapses can result in jail time on the way to graduation — and, although it is a sentence of special probation rather than a dismissal, successful completion can make the conviction eligible for expungement under N.J.S.A. 2C:35-14(m). It is a major treatment-focused alternative in addiction-driven cases.

What's Pretrial Intervention (PTI) and would it work in my case?

PTI is a diversion program for first-time indictable offenders. Complete supervision and the case is dismissed. Excellent fit for third- and fourth-degree drug charges.

Pretrial Intervention under N.J.S.A. 2C:43-12source allows first-time offenders charged with indictable offenses to enter supervised probation in lieu of prosecution. Typical terms are one to three years and may include drug testing, treatment, community service, and reporting requirements. Successful completion dismisses the case. PTI is particularly powerful for third- and fourth-degree drug charges by defendants without a prior indictable record. Admission is not automatic — the prosecutor weighs the statutory factors and can object — which is why the PTI application packet matters. A complete application addressing the criteria explicitly can make the strongest case for diversion.

What gets drug cases dismissed?

Most often, an illegal search. If the stop, search, or warrant fails Fourth Amendment scrutiny, the drugs get suppressed and the case usually collapses.

Drug cases are often vulnerable to Fourth Amendment challenges because they frequently begin with police finding contraband during a search. If the underlying car stop lacked reasonable suspicion, the search of the vehicle was outside a recognized warrant exception, the consent was coerced, the protective frisk exceeded its scope, or the search warrant affidavit was insufficient, the drugs themselves can be suppressed as fruit of the unlawful search — and without the drugs, the State is frequently left without the evidence its case depends on. Other dismissal paths include attacking constructive possession in shared-space cases, challenging lab analysis and chain of custody, contesting informant reliability, and pressing PTI or Drug Court diversion.

Related criminal defense resources

Talk to a New Jersey drug defense attorney

A drug charge in New Jersey carries consequences that extend well outside the courtroom — employment, housing, immigration, professional licensing, family. Our attorneys work every available angle — Fourth Amendment, intent, lab analysis, PTI, Drug Court, downgrade — to limit that impact wherever the facts allow. You do not need to know which of those doors is open before you call; sorting that out is the work. Contact Simon Law Group or call (800) 709-1131 to request a confidential consultation, and staff will ask a few short questions about the charge, the county, and the timing so the right attorney can review it.

Reviewed by Britt J. Simon, Esq., Managing Partner, Simon Law Group, LLC — May 2026

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