June 4, 2013
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: 212-549-2666,
media@aclu.org
LOUISVILLE, Ky. – According to a new report by the ACLU, Blacks were
arrested for marijuana possession at six times the rate of whites in
2010, despite comparable marijuana usage rates. The report,
Marijuana in Black and White: Billions of Dollars Wasted on Racially Biased Arrests,
released today, is the first ever to examine state and county marijuana
arrest rates nationally by race. The findings show that while there
were pronounced racial disparities in marijuana arrests 10 years ago,
they have grown significantly worse.
“The War on Marijuana has disproportionately been a war on people of
color,” says Ezekiel Edwards, Director of the Criminal Law Reform
Project at the ACLU and one of the primary authors of the report. “State
and local governments have aggressively enforced marijuana laws
selectively against Black people and communities, needlessly ensnaring
hundreds of thousands of people in the criminal justice system at
tremendous human and financial cost.”
In Kentucky, the counties with the largest racial disparity in
marijuana possession arrests were Nelson, Campbell and Kenton counties.
Statewide, police officers made 6,540 arrests for marijuana possession
in 2010, and marijuana possession rates accounted for 31.8% of all drug
arrests in 2010.
Despite the fact that a majority of Americans now support marijuana
legalization, Kentucky spent $19,499,768 enforcing marijuana laws in
2010. Nationally, states spent an estimated $3.61 billion enforcing
marijuana possession laws in 2010 alone.
“The aggressive policing of marijuana is time-consuming, costly,
racially biased, and doesn’t work,” says Ezekiel Edwards, director of
the Criminal Law Reform Project at the ACLU and one of the primary
authors of the report. “These arrests have a significant detrimental
impact on people’s lives, as well as on the communities in which they
live. When people are arrested for possessing even tiny amounts of
marijuana, they can be disqualified from public housing and student
financial aid, lose or find it more difficult to obtain employment, lose
custody of their child, and be deported. In addition, the targeted
enforcement of marijuana possession laws against people of color creates
a community of mistrust and reduced cooperation with the police, which
damages public safety. Furthermore, despite being a priority for many
police departments across the states for the past decade, the aggressive
enforcement of marijuana laws has not even accomplished one of law
enforcement’s purported goals: to eradicate or even diminish the use of
marijuana.”
Key national findings from the report include:
Arrests Rates
- Nationwide, between 2001 and 2010, there were 8.2 million marijuana
arrests. Over 7 million, or 88%, of these arrests were for possession
(versus for sale or distribution). In 2010, there were over 889,000
marijuana arrests – 300,000 more than arrests for all violent crimes
combined that year. This means one marijuana arrest every 37 seconds in
2010. Over 780,000 of those arrests were for possession.
Race Disparities
- Nationwide, a Black person was over 3.7 times more likely to be
arrested for marijuana possession than a white person, despite
comparable usage rates.
- In the states with the worst disparities, Blacks were on average
more than 6 times as likely to be arrested for marijuana possession as
whites. And, in counties with the worst disparities, Blacks were over
10, 15 and even 30 times more likely to be arrested.
The racial disparities exist in all regions of the U.S., as well as
in both large and small counties, cities and rural areas, and in both
high- and low-income communities. Disparities are also consistently high
whether Blacks make up a small or a large percentage of a county’s
overall population.
The ACLU is calling for the states to legalize marijuana by licensing
and regulating marijuana production, distribution, and possession for
persons 21 or older, taxing marijuana sales, and removing state law
criminal and civil penalties for such activities, which it says would
eliminate the unfair racially- and community-targeted selective
enforcement of marijuana laws.
In addition, at a time when states are facing budget shortfalls,
taxing and regulating would allow them to save millions of dollars
currently spent on enforcement while raising millions more in revenue,
money that can be invested in public schools and community and public
health programs, including drug treatment. If legalization is not
possible, the ACLU recommends depenalizing marijuana possession by
removing all civil and criminal penalties for authorized use and
possession for persons 21 or older; or, if depenalization is not
possible, decriminalizing low-level marijuana possession by replacing
all criminal penalties for use and possession of small amounts of
marijuana for adults and youth with a maximum civil penalty of a small
fine. Finally, if decriminalization is not possible, the
ACLU suggests
police and prosecutors deprioritize enforcement of marijuana possession
laws.
In the report, the organization also urges lawmakers and law
enforcement to reform policing practices, including ending racial
profiling as well as unconstitutional stops, frisks, and searches, and
also to reform state and federal funding streams that incentivize police
to make low-level drug arrests.
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