Many Americans arrested for marijuana won't find relief under Biden's pardon plan
Social Equity & Social JusticeArticle07 Oct, 2022
Last edited: 07 Oct, 2022, 4:11 PM

Many Americans arrested for marijuana won't find relief under Biden's pardon plan

President Joe Biden’s announcement Thursday that he would pardon federal convictions for simple possession of marijuana could help more than 6,500 people obtain employment or other opportunities, but it’ll do little for most people incarcerated for marijuana.

usatoday

Biden to pardon federal convictions for marijuana possession

President Joe Biden announced steps he's taking to reform marijuana laws, including pardoning 6,500 people with federal possession convictions.

President Joe Biden’s announcement Thursday that he would pardon federal convictions for simple possession of marijuana could help more than 6,500 people obtain employment or other opportunities, but it’ll do little for most people incarcerated for marijuana.

Biden also pushed for more governors to follow suit for state offenses, where many marijuana charges are filed.

“Just as no one should be in a federal prison solely due to the possession of marijuana, no one should be in a local jail or state prison for that reason, either,” Biden said.

Biden's move recognizes the problem of mass marijuana incarceration, said Morgan Fox, political director for the nonprofit National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws.

"It should be a measure of hope," he said.

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Last year, about 1,000 people were charged with violating federal marijuana laws, according to a United States Sentencing Commission report cited by NORML. Nearly 7,000 were federally charged with those offenses in 2012.

Across the nation, about 500,000 people were arrested on cannabis-related offenses in 2019. Most of those charges were for state offenses, the FBI said.

Marijuana accounted for more than 1 in 3 possession arrests that same year, according to the Pew Charitable Trusts' public safety performance project. In 2009, that number was more than 1 in 2.

Nineteen states and Washington, D.C., have legalized marijuana and 31 states have decriminalized the substance. Racial disparities in drug arrests persist even as the legal marijuana industry remains dominated by white entrepreneurs.

Nearly 70% of Americans support legalizing marijuana, according to a Gallup poll.

Opinion:America is ready for marijuana reform. Biden's pardon announcement proves it.

Natalie Papillion, director of strategic initiatives at the Last Prisoner Project, praised Biden for first focusing on repairing the harms of the war on drugs as opposed to other aspects of marijuana legalization but said there is work to ensure that more people get justice.

Nearly 70% of Americans support legalizing marijuana, according to a Gallop poll.

"Before we talk about how much money we can really make, services and so forth and so on, we need to talk about how we can unwind the harms of those who have most been impacted, people who have been arrested and put into jail," Papillion said.

She urged the president to pardon all nonviolent marijuana offenses, not just simple possession.

While on the campaign trail, Biden said that marijuana should be decriminalized and that records should be expunged. Earlier this year, Biden granted nine people with federal marijuana offenses clemency.

Maritza Perez, director of the Drug Policy Alliance's Office of Federal Affairs, said there should be fuller relief for people, including resentencing, expungement and removing immigration consequences.

"It's a step in the right direction, but definitely does not do enough to really help repair the harms of the drug war," she said.

Protestors urge the State of Wyoming to legalize marijuana during a demonstration in 2014 in Cheyenne, Wyoming

Perez said she hopes Congress will act on several bills dealing with marijuana legalization.

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October 67, 2022 5:05 AM ET

Tiffany Cusaac-Smith

USA TODAY

Images Credit:

  1. Patrick Colson-Price, USA Today
  2. Sandy Hooper, USA Today
  3. Getty Images
  4. Alan Rogers, The Caspar Star-Tribune Via AP

Source : USA Today

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