NATIONAL DRUG POLICY:
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Prepared For The Senate Special Committee On Illegal Drugs
Benjamin Dolin
Law and Government Division
24 July 2001
LIBRARY OF PARLIAMENT
A.
The Federal-State Legislative Framework
B.
Historical
1.
The Harrison Narcotic Act of 1914
2.
Subsequent Measures
C. Current Legislation and Enforcement
a.
The Controlled Substances Act
b.
Scheduling under the CSA – The Example of Marijuana
c.
Proposed Legislation
d.
Federal Penalties
a. General
b.
Medical Marijuana
D.
Federal Drug Policy Goals and Objectives
E.
Administration of the Policy
A.
The LaGuardia Committee Report – 1944
B.
ABA-AMA Joint Committee on Narcotic Drugs – 1961
C.
The Schafer Commission – 1972
D.
Consumer Reports – 1972
E.
New York City Bar Association Review of the Rockefeller Drug Laws –
1977
F. National Research Council, National Academy of Science –
1982
G.
Research Advisory Panel for the State of California – 1989
H.
New York County Lawyers Association – 1996
I.
National Academy of Sciences, Institute of Medicine – 1999
A.
Trends and Patterns of Illegal Drug Use
B.
Law Enforcement Statistics
C.
Correctional Populations in the United States: Selected
Statistics for 1997
D.
Federal Drug Prosecutions; Selected Statistics for 1999
E.
DEA Seizures of Non-Drug Property – 1997
APPENDIX
2 – State by State List of Marijuana Penalties
APPENDIX 3 – Drug Control Funding by Agency FY 2000 - FY 2002
NATIONAL DRUG
POLICY:
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
The United States presents a complicated patchwork of drug laws and
enforcement practices. The
complementary federal and state legislative regimes relating to illegal drugs
overlap and, at times, appear to be in conflict.
This paper will provide a brief historical overview of the development
of American drug policy, a summary of the current pertinent legislative and
enforcement structures and a selection of related statistical data.
A synopsis of reports from significant commissions of inquiry will also
be presented.
This paper forms part of a series of country profiles prepared by the
Parliamentary Research Branch for the Special Senate Committee on Illegal
Drugs.
A.
The Federal-State Legislative Framework
Historically, most criminal law and its enforcement was a matter
reserved to the jurisdiction of the states.
Article I of the U.S. Constitution delineates the federal
government’s areas of legislative authority and the Tenth Amendment
expressly provides that all powers not granted to the central government are
reserved to the states. Criminal
law is not among the powers specified as being within the federal
government’s purview and in Congress’ early days, federal criminal laws
were restricted to acts injurious to the national government, such as treason
and counterfeiting, or offences of an extra-territorial nature, such as piracy
and felonies committed on the high seas.
Despite this, the U.S. Congress has managed to assume a significant
role in the criminalization of drug use.
Although the “Father of the Constitution,” James Madison, had
assured the states that their powers were “numerous and indefinite” and
those of the central government “few and defined,”([1])
judicial constitutional analysis subsequently provided a very wide
interpretation of the sphere of congressional authority.
Beginning with the 1819 case of McCulloch v. Marlyland ([2])
the U.S. Supreme Court has given a broad reading to the Article I provision
that the federal government may enact all laws that are “necessary and
proper” for executing its listed powers.
Two of Congress’ listed powers are taxation and the regulation of
foreign and interstate commerce. As
discussed below, the federal government has used these heads of power as the
foothold for entering into the regulation of drug use.
B. Historical([3])
From the time of the U.S. Civil War (1861-1865) to the end of the 19th
century, the use and sale of opium, morphine, cocaine and other psychoactive
drugs were legal and common. Opium
was available with or without a prescription and was an ingredient in many
patent medicines, including various pain-killers, cough mixtures and teething
syrups for infants. Cocaine was
also used medicinally, as well as in soft drinks and wine.
Things started to change around the turn of the century.
Heroin was first isolated in 1898 and was purported to convey the same
benefits as opium or morphine, without the risk of addiction. The realization of heroin’s addictive properties soon after
its introduction coincided with racist appeals to protect American society
from drugs. Initially, two drugs
were targeted: Cocaine,
associated mainly with blacks who were said to go on violent rampages under
its influence, and opium, the smoking of which was associated with the
Chinese. Alcohol temperance
societies and religious groups also played key roles in lobbying for
prohibition.
Despite strong opposition from the patent medicine industry, the U.S.
Congress passed the Pure Food and Drug Act in 1906.
This legislation required over-the-counter medicines to list the amount
of drugs contained in them in the hope that this would reduce the use of such
medicines. Soon to follow was the
Opium Smoking Act of 1909 (as Amended, 1914) in which Congress banned
the importation of the drug for non-medicinal purposes.
1.
The Harrison Narcotic Act of 1914
The Harrison Act was a significant development in American drug
policy. Earlier legislation
enacted in 1909 had restricted the importation of opium in accordance with the
international conventions against the use of the drug.
Soon domestic pressures for further federal action began to escalate as
state anti-narcotics laws proliferated and concern became apparent in the
medical community about the freedom with which addictive drugs were being
dispensed. Initially designed to
medicalize cocaine and heroin by restricting their distribution to physicians,
the Harrison Act was passed in 1914.
Its stated purpose was soon altered by the influence of the
prohibitionist fervour of the day and this legislation became the unusual
model upon which the administration of American narcotics policy would
develop.
Constitutional
limits, as perceived at the time, meant that federal laws had to focus on
international controls, interstate transfer and taxation.
The Act therefore addressed drug use by requiring anyone selling drugs
to be licensed and to keep records of all sales, ostensibly for tax purposes.
As part of this regulatory process, users had to obtain prescriptions.
Even though the Act specifically provided that doctors could prescribe
narcotics, they could only do so if it was in the course of their
“professional practice.”
There were court challenges to the legislation.
However, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the Harrison Act as a
revenue act and not a policing measure.([4])
It was subsequently held that the Act did not permit physicians to
prescribe drugs to addicts to keep them physically comfortable or maintain
their addiction.([5])
The Behrman decision([6])
of 1922 further restricted the ability of physicians to prescribe and the
prosecution of pharmacists and physicians resulted in legal supplies of
opiates and other drugs essentially becoming unavailable by the early 1920s.
In the Depression years, fears about “degenerate Mexicans” smoking
marijuana also led to legislative action.
Some suggest that this represents a common thread in American drug
policy; that is, the determining factor in deciding whether a particular drug
was criminalized was not its inherent properties or potential for social harm,
but rather the kinds of people associated with its use.([7])
By 1931, 29 states had outlawed marijuana and in 1937 Congress passed
the Marihuana Tax Act which, like the Harrison Act, established
federal control over marijuana pursuant to Congress’ revenue authority.
Although opposed by the American Medical Association at the time, the
Act had the support of the country’s top drug cop, the head of the Federal
Bureau of Narcotics (“FBN”), Henry J. Anslinger.
Anslinger, a central figure in the history of American drug policy, had
been named the commissioner of the FBN in 1930 and headed the organization
through five presidential administrations, until 1962.
Often compared to his contemporary J. Edgar Hoover who controlled the
F.B.I. with similar tenacity, Anslinger did not support a public health
approach to drug policy and argued that jailing users was the only proper
response. He often suggested that
drugs were part of a foreign plot. During
W.W.II, he accused the Japanese of using narcotics to sap America’s will to
fight; following the war, he asserted that it was the Communists who were
attempting to do so.
C.
Current Legislation and Enforcement
a.
The Controlled Substances Act
In 1970 the U.S. Congress enacted the federal Controlled Substances Act
(the “CSA”)([8])
pursuant to the federal authority to regulate interstate commerce.([9])
This Act repealed most of the earlier federal legislation, including
the Harrison Act and the Marihuana Tax Act, and is the
foundation of U.S. federal drug law today. Based on a series of schedules, drugs are categorized and
controlled to varying degrees. The
most restrictions are placed on Schedule I drugs which cannot be possessed by
anyone, except for the purpose of research that has been licensed by the
federal government. This Schedule
includes drugs such as marijuana, heroin, MDMA, LSD and peyote which are
deemed to have no medical use and a high abuse potential. Schedule II substances, which have an accepted medical use
and are deemed to have an abuse potential less than those in Schedule I, are
also subjected to tight controls. Included
in Schedule II are cocaine, opium, morphine, meperidine (Demerol) and codeine.
The enactment of the CSA in 1970 represented a significant change in
one key respect. Marijuana was
differentiated from other drugs and federal penalties were reduced, not only
for possession, but also for trafficking and distribution offences.
This was to change, however, during the Reagan administration in the
1980s.
In 1982 President Reagan signed an executive order creating the post of
White House Drug Policy Advisor. The
Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984, the Anti-Drug Abuse Act
of 1986 and the Anti-Drug Abuse Amendment Act of 1988 raised federal
penalties for various drug-related offences (including marijuana offences),
increased funding for drug control activities and sought to improve the
coordination of federal drug control efforts.
The National Narcotics Leadership Act of 1988 created the Office
of National Drug Control Policy, the director of which is commonly referred to
as the “Drug Czar.”([10])
Many commentators have suggested that these laws were passed during a
time of extreme anti-drug hysteria resulting from the introduction of crack
cocaine.([11])
Propagated by politicians and embraced by the mainstream media, myths
regarding crack likely had a significant impact on the increased use of
mandatory minimum sentences and the expansion of the American “war on
drugs” during the Reagan era.
b.
Scheduling under the CSA – The Example of Marijuana
An examination of a petition to the Drug Enforcement Administration to
reschedule marijuana is instructive of the Scheduling process under the CSA.([12])
In concluding that marijuana should remain in Schedule I, the
Department of Justice considered eight factors:
1.
The drug’s actual or relative potential for abuse;
2.
Scientific evidence of its pharmacological effects;
3.
The state of current scientific knowledge of the drug;
4.
Its history and current pattern of abuse;
5.
The scope, duration and significance of abuse;
6.
What, if any, risk there is to public health;
7.
The drug’s psychic or physiological dependence liability; and,
8.
Whether the drug is an immediate precursor of a substance already
controlled under the CSA.
The petition to reschedule was in part denied on the basis that
marijuana has a high potential for abuse.
While the term “abuse” is not defined in the CSA, the
administration examined various factors in ascertaining the potential for
abuse. Most important was its finding that individuals are taking
the substance in amounts sufficient to create a hazard to their health or to
the safety of other individuals or the community.
It was determined that while marijuana has low levels of toxicity
compared to other drugs of abuse, there are a number of risks resulting from
both acute and chronic use, such as dizziness, nausea, time distortions,
impaired judgement and short-term memory impairment. Also noted were studies from some authors who described a
“marijuana withdrawal syndrome” consisting of restlessness, mild
agitation, insomnia, nausea and cramping that resolves within days.
Another significant element of the analysis that precluded rescheduling
marijuana was the fact that the drug has no currently accepted medical use in
the United States. The Food and
Drug Administration has not yet authorized treatment using marijuana.
To do so would require that the following elements be satisfied:
1.
The drug’s chemistry must be known and reproducible;
2.
There must be adequate safety studies;
3.
There must be adequate and well-controlled studies proving efficacy;
4.
The drug must be accepted by qualified experts; and,
5.
The scientific evidence must be widely available.
The legislative war on drugs continues in the U.S. Congress.
The proposed Drug Dealer Liability Act of 1999 passed in the
U.S. House of Representatives and was received in the Senate at the end of
2000. It would impose civil
liability on drug dealers for the harm caused – either directly or
indirectly – by the use of controlled substances. Even the drug users themselves would be permitted to sue for
damages, although the statute requires that they first disclose to narcotics
enforcement officers everything they know about the source of the illegal
drugs. While it is not clear
whether this bill will be made law, a model Drug Dealer Liability Act has
so far been adopted by 13 states.([13])
Legislation entitled the Protecting Our Children from Drugs Act of
2000 was passed by the House of Representatives on 17 October 2000. It would amend the Controlled Substances Act to
further increase penalties for drug dealers who involve children in the drug
trade. Mandatory minimum
sentences would increase for dealers who use children under 18 to distribute
drugs in or near schools or other “protected locations” such as
playgrounds and video arcades. Other
proposed initiatives include the Drug Free America Act of 2001, the Domestic
Narcotic Demand Reduction Act of 2001 and the Drug Treatment and
Research Enhancement Act of 2001.
The following charts provide a summary of the fines and the terms of
imprisonment for selected violations of the federal Controlled Substances
Act and related federal laws.([14])
Note that for a third felony drug offence involving amounts
constituting a top level offence, there is a mandatory life sentence without
the possibility of release. Also
note that the indicated weights refer to any mixture containing a detectable
amount of the illegal drug regardless of the substance in the mixture.
“Conspiracy” and “attempt” offences carry the same penalties as
the underlying offence.
Chart
1([15])
Unlawful
distribution, possession with intent to distribute, manufacture, importation
and exportation |
||||
Substance |
Offence
Number |
Amount
of Drug |
Fine (in
dollars) |
Imprisonment |
Heroin |
First
Offence |
1
kg or more |
4-10
million |
10
years to life |
100
g – 1 kg |
2-5
million |
5-40
years |
||
Less
than 100 g |
1-5
million |
Up
to 20 years |
||
Second
Offence([16]) |
1
kg or more |
8-20
million |
20
years - life |
|
100
g – 1 kg |
4-10
million |
10
years - life |
||
Less
than 100 g |
2-10
million |
Up
to 30 years |
||
Coca
leaves, Cocaine or “Crack” |
First
Offence |
50
g or more |
4-10
million |
10
years to life |
5-50
g |
2-5
million |
5-40
years |
||
Less
than 5 g |
1-5
million |
Up
to 20 years |
||
Second
Offence |
50
g or more |
8-20
million |
20
years to life |
|
5-50
g |
4-10
million |
10
years to life |
||
Less
than 5 g |
2-10
million |
Up
to 30 years |
||
LSD |
First
Offence |
10
g or more |
4-10
million |
10
years to life |
1-10
g |
2-5
million |
5-40
years |
||
Less
than 10 g |
1-5
million |
Up
to 20 years |
||
Second
Offence |
10
g or more |
8-20
million |
20
years to life |
|
1-10
g |
4-10
million |
10
years to life |
||
Less
than 10 g |
2-10
million |
Up
to 30 years |
||
Marijuana |
First
Offence |
1000
kg or more or 1000 or more plants |
4-10
million |
10
years to life |
100-1000
kg or 100-1000 plants |
2-5
million |
5-40
years |
||
50-100
kg or 100 plants |
1-5
million |
Up
to 20 years |
||
Under
50 kg([17]) |
250,000-1
million |
Up
to 5 years |
||
Second
Offence |
1000
kg or more or 1000 or more plants |
8-20
million |
20
years to life |
|
100-1000
kg or 100-1000 plants |
4-10
million |
10
years to life |
||
50-100
kg or 100 plants |
2-10
million |
Up
to 30 years |
||
Under
50 kg |
500,000-2 million |
Up
to 10 years |
Chart
2
Simple
Possession |
||||
Drug |
Offence
Number |
Amount
of Drug |
Fine (in
dollars) |
Imprisonment |
Cocaine
based |
First |
Over
5 g |
Up
to 250,000 |
5-20
years |
First |
5
g or less |
Minimum
1,000 |
Up
to 1 year |
|
All
other |
First |
All
amounts |
||
Cocaine
based |
Second([18]) |
Over
3 g |
Up
to 250,000 |
5-20
years |
All
other |
Second |
All
amounts |
Minimum
2,500 |
15
days to 2 years |
Cocaine
based |
Third |
Over
1 g |
Up
to 250,000 |
5-20
years |
All
other |
Third |
All
amounts |
Minimum
5,000 |
90
days to 3 years |
In the U.S. a group called the National Conference of Commissioners on
Uniform State Law has the task of drafting legislation that is to be
recommended for adoption by all states in an effort to promote legislative
consistency throughout the nation. The
most recent Uniform Controlled Substances Act was drafted in 1994.
The Act sets out the prohibited activities in detail but specific fines
and sentencing are left to the discretion of the individual States.
Most states have substantially adopted the major provisions of the
Uniform Act([19])
with the exception of New Hampshire and Vermont where the State laws are not a
substantial adoption of the Uniform CSA, although they contain some similar
provisions and have the same general purpose.
Also of note are the medical marijuana exemptions discussed below.
In terms of sentencing, there are significant discrepancies between
states. Appendix 2 of this review
provides an overview of sentence ranges in various states for marijuana
offences. With respect to
sentencing for other drug offences, some states have experimented with
extremely harsh penalties. New
York’s “Rockefeller Laws,” for example, are referred to herein in the
section entitled “Key Reports and Studies.”
Other states that adopted similar “get-tough” penalties are now
re-examining mandatory minimums, often as a result of fiscal considerations.
For example, the state legislature in Louisiana overhauled its drug
laws in June 2001. New
legislation has cut drug sentences and repealed mandatory minimums for many
non-violent crimes. As one
republican legislator was quoted as saying, “It’s costing us too much to
lock these people up and throw away the key.”
Since 1978, medical marijuana laws have been enacted in 35 states.
Five have since expired or been repealed but the balance remain on the
books. Of those remaining:
·
12 states
have “Therapeutic Research Program” laws that purport to permit scientific
research (although this is complicated by the federal prohibition).
·
10 states
(and the District of Columbia) have symbolic laws that recognize the potential
medicinal value of marijuana, but do not provide any protection from arrest.
·
8 states have
laws that effectively allow patients to use medical marijuana despite federal
law.
The following chart provides details of the eight states with effective
medical marijuana laws. While
marijuana possession is still a federal crime, most drug arrests are made by
state and local officials. Since
the federal government cannot force state and local police to enforce federal
statutes, medical marijuana users are usually able to avoid prosecution in
these states. However, since
pharmacies do not sell marijuana, some distribution centres called
“buyers’ clubs” have emerged and these operations have been hampered by
federal law enforcement. Recently,
the Supreme Court examined the issue of buyers’ clubs in Conant v.
Oakland Cannabis Buyers’ Cooperative.([20])
The court unanimously ruled that there is no medical necessity defence
to the Controlled Substances Act’s prohibitions on manufacturing and
distributing marijuana. Because
the CSA classifies marijuana as a Schedule I drug, marijuana has been deemed
to have no medical benefits. While
the decision in Conant does not render state laws regarding medical
marijuana inoperative, it does enhance the federal government’s ability to
prosecute under the CSA in all states. That
said, federal enforcement efforts have not, thus far, targeted individuals who
possess or cultivate small amounts for medical use.
Only the buyers’ clubs (also known as “compassion clubs”) have
been targeted.
In respect of the following chart, it should be noted that the quantity
of marijuana a patient may possess varies from state to state.
The provisions exempting caregivers from criminal liability may also
vary.
State
and Date Enacted |
Protection
provided to Patients |
Documentation
Required |
Alaska
– 3 Nov. 1998 |
Affirmative
defence([21]) provided to
those registered with the state |
Signed
physician statement confirming that patient was examined, has a
debilitating medical condition and other medications were considered |
California
– 5 Nov. 1996 |
Exemption
from prosecution if marijuana possession or cultivation is solely for
the medical purposes of the patient |
Written
or oral approval by physician who has determined that the patient’s
health would benefit from marijuana in the treatment of a qualifying
condition |
Colorado
– 7 Nov. 2000 |
Exemption
from prosecution if in possession of a registry card; affirmative
defence if no card, but in compliance with requirements of law |
Diagnosed
prior to arrest as having a debilitating condition and advised by the
physician that marijuana might benefit the patient |
Hawaii
– 14 June 2000 |
Exemption
from prosecution if in possession of a registry card; “choice of
evils” defence also available([22]) |
Card
obtained with medical records or a statement from a physician that
there is a debilitating condition and the potential benefits of
marijuana would “likely outweigh the health risks” |
Maine
– 2 Nov. 1999 |
Burden
on state to prove that patient’s medical use was not authorized by
statute |
Medical
records or physician’s letter showing that the patient has a
qualifying condition, that the risks have been discussed and that the
patient “might benefit” from medical marijuana |
Nevada
– 7 Nov. 2000 |
Exemption
from prosecution |
“Advice
required”; specifics yet to be determined by legislature |
Oregon
– 3 Nov. 1998 |
Exemption
from prosecution if in possession of registry card; affirmative
defence if no card, but in compliance with the law; choice of evils
defence |
Diagnosed
within 12 months of arrest with a qualifying condition and
advised by attending physician that marijuana “may mitigate the
symptoms or effects” |
Washington
– 3 Nov. 1998 |
Exemption
from prosecution if patient qualifies, has no more marijuana than
necessary for personal medical use and presents valid documentation to
law enforcement; affirmative defence if in compliance with statute |
Signed
physician statement or medical records that indicate that physician is
of the opinion that the “potential benefits” of marijuana “would
likely outweigh the health risks” |
D. Federal Drug Policy Goals and Objectives
National drug-control policy in the United States purports to be based
upon prevention, education, treatment and research, complemented by “supply
reduction” activities.([23])
To quote from the 2001 Annual Report of the Office of National Drug
Control Policy (“ONDCP”):
“Through a balanced array of demand-reduction and supply-reduction
actions, we strive to reduce drug abuse and availability by half and the
consequences of drug abuse by at least 25% by 2007.”([24])
Using
the metaphor of cancer for the nation’s drug problem, the ONDCP lists the
following strategic goals and objectives as being the heart of American
federal action in this area.([25])
Goal 1: Educate and enable
America’s youth to reject illegal drugs as well as alcohol and
tobacco. |
|
Objective 1: |
Educate
parents and other care givers, teachers, coaches, clergy, health
professionals, and business and community leaders to help youth reject
illegal drugs and underage alcohol and tobacco use. |
Objective 2: |
Pursue
a vigorous advertising and public communications program dealing with
the dangers of illegal drugs, alcohol, and tobacco use by youth. |
Objective 3: |
Promote
zero tolerance policies for youth regarding the use of illegal drugs,
alcohol, and tobacco within the family, school, workplace, and
community. |
Objective 4: |
Provide
students in grades K-12 with alcohol, tobacco, and drug prevention
programs and policies that are research based. |
Objective 5: |
Support
parents and adult mentors in encouraging youth to engage in positive,
healthy lifestyles and modeling behavior to be emulated by young
people. |
Objective 6: |
Encourage
and assist the development of community coalitions and programs in
preventing drug abuse and underage alcohol and tobacco use. |
Objective 7: |
Create
partnerships with the media, entertainment industry, and professional
sports organizations to avoid the glamorization, condoning, or
normalization of illegal drugs and the use of alcohol and tobacco by
youth. |
Objective 8: |
Develop
and implement a set of research-based principles upon which prevention
programming can be based. |
Objective 9: |
Support
and highlight research, including the development of scientific
information, to inform drug, alcohol, and tobacco prevention programs
targeting young Americans. |
Goal 2: Increase
the safety of America’s citizens by substantially reducing
drug-related crime and violence. |
|
Objective 1: |
Strengthen
law enforcement – including federal, state, and local drug task
forces – to combat drug-related violence, disrupt criminal
organizations, and arrest and prosecute the leaders of illegal drug
syndicates. |
Objective 2: |
Improve
the ability of High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTAs) to
counter drug trafficking. |
Objective 3: |
Help
law enforcement to disrupt money laundering and seize and forfeit
criminal assets. |
Objective 4: |
Break
the cycle of drug abuse and crime. |
Objective 5: |
Support
and highlight research, including the development of scientific
information and data, to inform law enforcement, prosecution,
incarceration, and treatment of offenders involved with illegal drugs. |
Goal 3: Reduce
health and social costs to the public of illegal drug use. |
|
Objective 1: |
Support
and promote effective, efficient, and accessible drug treatment,
ensuring the development of a system that is responsive to emerging
trends in drug abuse. |
Objective 2: |
Reduce
drug-related health problems, with an emphasis on infectious diseases. |
Objective 3: |
Promote
national adoption of drug-free workplace programs that emphasize a
comprehensive program that includes: drug testing, education,
prevention, and intervention. |
Objective 4: |
Support
and promote the education, training, and credentialing of
professionals who work with substance abusers. |
Objective 5: |
Support
research into the development of medications and related protocols to
prevent or reduce drug dependence and abuse. |
Objective 6: |
Support
and highlight research and technology, including the acquisition and
analysis of scientific data, to reduce the health and social costs of
illegal drug use. |
Objective 7: |
Support
and disseminate scientific research and data on the consequences of
legalizing drugs. |
Goal 4:
Shield America’s air, land, and sea frontiers from the drug threat. |
|
Objective 1: |
Conduct
flexible operations to detect, disrupt, deter, and seize illegal drugs
in transit to the United States and at U.S. borders. |
Objective 2: |
Improve
the coordination and effectiveness of U.S. drug law enforcement
programs with particular emphasis on the Southwest Border, Puerto
Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. |
Objective 3: |
Improve
bilateral and regional cooperation with Mexico as well as other
cocaine and heroin transit zone countries in order to reduce the flow
of illegal drugs into the United States. |
Objective 4: |
Support
and highlight research and technology – including the development of
scientific information and data – to detect, disrupt, deter, and
seize illegal drugs in transit to the United States and at U.S.
borders. |
Goal
5: Break foreign and domestic drug sources of supply. |
|
Objective 1: |
Produce
a net reduction in the worldwide cultivation of coca, opium, and
marijuana and in the production of other illegal drugs, especially
methamphetamine. |
Objective 2: |
Disrupt
and dismantle major international drug trafficking organizations and
arrest, prosecute, and incarcerate their leaders. |
Objective 3: |
Support
and complement source country drug control efforts and strengthen
source country political will and drug control capabilities. |
Objective 4: |
Develop
and support bilateral, regional, and multilateral initiatives and
mobilize international organizational efforts against all aspects of
illegal drug production, trafficking, and abuse. |
Objective 5: |
Promote
international policies and laws that deter money laundering and
facilitate anti-money laundering investigations as well as seizure and
forfeiture of associated assets. |
Objective 6: |
Support
and highlight research and technology, including the development of
scientific data, to reduce the worldwide supply of illegal drugs. |
E. Administration of the Policy
As the data in Appendix 1 indicates, the national drug control budget
is enormous. Over 18 billion
dollars has been budgeted for the year 2001 for the purpose of supporting the
goals and objectives of the National Drug Control Strategy. Numerous federal departments, including Defense, Education,
Justice, State and the Treasury, are involved and often must coordinate with
state and local government agencies and a wide assortment of community and
professional groups. This is all
overseen by the ONDCP. The
agencies involved within the various government departments are listed in the
Drug Control Funding Budget Tables in Appendix 3.
A key government department is the Department of Justice which is
responsible for many of the agencies involved in this area and receives a
significant portion of the drug control budget; over 8 billion dollars in
2001.([26])
Various agencies receive funding through Justice, including
the Bureau of Prisons, the F.B.I., INTERPOL, the U.S. Marshals Service,
the Immigration and Naturalization Service and the Drug Enforcement Agency
(“DEA”). The DEA([27])
merits special mention in the Justice Department’s administration of drug
control policy. Its mission is to
enforce the controlled substances laws and regulations and to recommend and
support non-enforcement programs aimed at reducing the availability of illicit
controlled substances on the domestic and international markets. Established
in 1973, it is the successor of Anslinger’s FBN and other enforcement arms
of the federal government as illustrated in the following graphic.([28])
Apart
from its law enforcement duties, the DEA manages national drug intelligence
and is responsible, under the policy guidance of the Secretary of State and
U.S. Ambassadors, for all programs associated with drug law enforcement
counterparts in foreign countries. In
this capacity, the organization liases with the United Nations, Interpol, and
other organizations on matters relating to international drug control
programs. American actions
outside of U.S. territory include “Plan Columbia,” a program targeted at
reducing cocaine productivity in that country to which over a billion dollars
has been committed, as well as well joint enforcement activities undertaken
with other governments such as Mexico. As
well, under the Foreign Assistance Act, the U.S. is required to impose
substantial restrictions on bilateral assistance to those countries listed by
the White House as being major drug producing or transit countries.
Similarly, the Foreign Narcotics Kingpin Designation Act permits
the President to designate foreign individuals as “drug kingpins,” thereby
denying them access to the U.S. financial system and making illegal any
transactions between the “kingpin” and U.S. companies or individuals.
The costs of
incarceration, the unequal impact of drug laws on racial minorities and police
corruption resulting from the war on drugs are issues that have garnered
increased attention in this ongoing debate.
For example, the Republican governor of New Mexico has called for the
decriminalization of all drugs – “Control it, regulate it, tax it,” he
has been quoted as saying([29])
- citing the mounting cost of addressing drug abuse problems with prison
rather than treatment. Others
criticize current policy on the basis that black Americans are
disproportionately targeted in drug law enforcement.
The group Human Rights Watch notes in a 2000 study that blacks comprise
62.7% and whites 36.7% of all drug offenders admitted to state prisons, even
though data confirms that this racial disparity “bears scant relation to
racial differences in drug offending.”([30])
The adverse affect on law enforcement is also being exposed by experts
such as the retired police chief of San Jose, California, Joseph McNamara, who
argues that official corruption will be a major problem “as long as we cling
to the present drug policies.”([31])
KEY
REPORTS AND STUDIES
What stands out most from the following studies is that although some
have suggested maintaining current laws while doing more research and others
have outright suggested decriminalization of some drugs, most have come to
remarkably consistent conclusions regarding the war on drugs.
A.
The LaGuardia Committee Report – 1944
In response to public concern regarding the use of marijuana, the New
York Academy of Medicine was commissioned by Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia to make
a thorough sociological and scientific investigation of the drug.
A sociological study dealing with the extent of marijuana smoking and
its relation to criminality was undertaken in conjunction with a clinical
study that examined the physiological and psychological effects of the drug.
In its report of 1944, the following conclusions were reached, inter
alia:
·
The practice of smoking marijuana does not lead to
addiction in the medical sense of the word.
·
The use of marijuana does not lead to morphine, heroin,
or cocaine addiction.
·
Marijuana is not the determining factor in the
commission of major crimes.
·
The publicity concerning the catastrophic effects of
marijuana smoking in New York City is unfounded.
In his introduction to the report, Mayor Laguardia noted a previous
study by an Army Board of Inquiry in which he had been involved and which
“emphasized the relative harmlessness of the drug.”
He further stated that the report showed that “the sociological,
psychological, and medical ills commonly attributed to marihuana have been
found to be exaggerated insofar the City of New York is concerned.”
However, he indicated that as the report was simply a step in the
scientific investigation of marijuana, the enforcement of laws prohibiting
marijuana use would continue until further scientific study justified amending
them.
B.
ABA-AMA Joint Committee on Narcotic Drugs – 1961
Beginning in the late 1950s, representatives from the American Bar
Association and the American Medical Association jointly examined the issue of
whether drug addiction was best viewed as a medical or a criminal issue.
In concluding that drug addiction is indeed a disease, the committee
stated that:
·
The weight of the evidence is heavily in favour of the
proposition that the addict’s dependence on narcotic drugs combined with the
high price in the illicit market is predominantly responsible for the crimes
committed. The drug itself is not
responsible for criminal behaviour.
·
In terms of its ill effects, drug addiction is a
problem of far less magnitude than alcoholism.
The committee recommended further study of treatment options for
addicts and noted that the enforcement policies of the U.S. Narcotics Bureau
did not provide the full answer to the problem of drug addiction.
Favourable reference was made to the British practice of permitting
physicians to treat addicts by maintaining their habit by prescription.
The head of the Narcotics Bureau, Harry Anslinger, set up his own
“Advisory Committee” which harshly criticized the ABA-AMA report.
Anslinger questioned the impartiality of the medical and legal
professionals who had reached conclusions that were at odds with government
policy. Specifically, his review
suggested that the medical treatment of drug addicts at clinics, as was taking
place to some extent in Great Britain, would create more addicts.
Members of his counter-committee argued that the medical and
psychiatric treatment of addicts had been a failure and that the
“prohibitory approach” had a greater impact on addiction rates.
One member, the Los Angeles Deputy Chief of Police and former head of
the L.A.P.D.’s Narcotics Division, Lynn White, suggested that the main
reason that enforcement had not yet succeeded in the battle against the
narcotics peddler was the lenient sentences being handed down by judges.
He argued that the best known cure for narcotic addition is to deprive
the addict of drugs and that, in his experience, more addicts beat their
addiction through “jail treatment” rather than “hospital treatment.”
He dismissed the British system, claiming that it created more addicts,
particularly among health care professionals, and criticized the ABA-AMA
committee’s comparison of the U.S. with England on the basis that the U.S.
had significantly more non-caucasians.
C.
The Shafer Commission – 1972
In 1972 President Nixon appointed a bipartisan commission to study
marijuana. The commission, sometimes referred to as the “Schafer
Commission” after its chairman, the Republican Governor of Pennsylvania
Raymond P. Schafer, was composed of sitting politicians and leading addiction
scholars. As stated in its first
report:
“Congress
created the Commission on Marihuana and Drug Abuse to separate fact from
fiction, reality from myth, and to achieve a balanced judgment on the
marihuana issue.”([32])
The Commission produced two reports.
One report, “Marihuana: A
Signal of Misunderstanding,” analyzed the biological and social aspects of
marijuana and reviewed the spectrum of possible legislative responses to
marijuana use in America. While
the commission rejected legalization “at the present time,” it recommended
the decriminalization of marijuana for personal use and further suggested that
distributing small amounts for no remuneration, or insignificant remuneration
not involving profit, should no longer be an offence.
Marijuana possessed in public, it was argued, should remain contraband
subject to seizure as the suggested policy was meant only to relate to private
use.
Other findings of note in the first report include:
·
None of the present theoretical constructs adequately
proves a causal connection that using marijuana makes one escalate to other
and more dangerous drugs.
·
There is no “systematic empirical evidence” to
support the thesis that marijuana use causes or precipitates criminal,
violent, aggressive or delinquent behaviour.
·
Further scientific research is needed in the area.
The Committee’s second report, “Drug Use in America:
Problem in Perspective,” examined not only marijuana use and its
impact, but other drugs as well, both licit and illicit, including tobacco,
alcohol, LSD, glue and inhalants, cocaine and heroin.
The recommendations included:
·
Congress should create a single Federal drug agency.
·
The U.S. should take steps to remove marijuana from the
1961 Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs since this drug does not pose the
same social and public heath problems associated with the opiates and coca
leaf products.
·
Both the 1961 Single Convention and the Psychotropic
Substances Convention (which at the time of the commission’s report was
still being negotiated) should be redrafted to make it clear that each nation
is free to determine for itself which domestic uses for controlled substances
it will allow, provided that each nation prevents diversion and prohibits
export for illegal use in other countries.
·
Current drug trafficking offences and the penalty
structure should be retained and the unauthorized possession of any controlled
substance for personal use except marijuana should remain a prohibited
act. However, the primary purpose
of possession laws should be the detection of people who would benefit from
treatment or prevention services, rather than criminal punishment.
·
Heroin maintenance should remain prohibited.
“The Consumers Union Report on Narcotics, Stimulants, Depressants,
Inhalants, Hallucinogens, and Marijuana – including Caffeine, Nicotine and
Alcohol” was drafted by Edward Brecher, a journalist and editor who visited
leading drug research and treatment centres in the U.S., Canada, England,
Sweden, Denmark and the Netherlands. He
interviewed experts and drug addicts and participated in the “Ad Hoc
Committee on the Treatment and Prevention of Drug Abuse and Drug Addiction.”
The Brecher Report examined both licit drugs (i.e. caffeine, nicotine
and alcohol) and illicit drugs, providing a detailed historical review of drug
laws, policies and attitudes, as well as a series of recommendations.
The report recommended that policy makers cease pursuing current
strategies; specifically:
·
Stop emphasizing measures designed to keep drugs away
from people. As the U.S. learned
with alcohol in the 1920s, prohibition does not work. In fact, laws and law enforcement exacerbate the problems
that arise from drug use and addiction. For
example, laws cannot keep heroin from heroin addicts but may result in raising
the price of a nickel’s worth of heroin to five dollars – with the further
result that addicts must steal vast amounts to feed their habit.
·
Stop publicizing the horrors of the “drug menace.”
Sensationalist publicity is counterproductive in that it, on the one
hand, may serve to popularize the drug attacked, while on the other hand, may
inflame non-drug users’ hostile emotions to such an extent that rational and
effective drug policies cannot be discussed.
·
Stop misclassifying drugs. Treating nicotine and alcohol as “non-drugs” and grouping
marijuana with heroin brings ridicule and disrepute upon the whole concept of
drug education.
·
Stop viewing the drug problem as a national problem.
The predominant drugs vary from place to place and from time to time
and effective solutions need to be tailor-made for specific communities.
·
Stop pursuing the goal of stamping out illicit drug
use. Reduction of drug use is an
attainable goal. Attempts to
eradicate all illicit drugs may serve to increase drug damage and efforts to
stamp out one drug tend to shift users to another.
Recommendations for positive action included:
·
Review U.S. policies to ensure that no addict needs to
get his drug on the black market.
·
Make methadone and other narcotics maintenance programs
available to all addicts.
·
Repeal all laws governing marijuana and enact
appropriate regulations with the assistance of a national marijuana
commission.
E.
New York City Bar Association review of the Rockefeller
Drug Laws – 1977
At the time the toughest in the nation, the Rockefeller drug laws had
been passed by the New York State legislature in May, 1973 with the intent of
deterring drug use and sales. Those
not deterred were to be isolated from society and subjected to inflexible and
exceptionally severe punishment. Mandatory
prison sentences for the unlawful possession and sale of controlled substances
were keyed to the weight of the drug involved.
Generally, possessing 4 ounces or more or trafficking two ounces
or more of a narcotic (typically heroin or cocaine) resulted in a mandatory 15
years to life sentence. Although
marijuana was originally included in the list of substances covered by the
Rockefeller laws, it was removed from the list in 1977.
The New York City Bar Association reported that these tougher penalties
had done nothing to reduce drug abuse and that the mandatory minimum sentences
were of little, if any, benefit.
F.
National Research Council, National Academy of Science – 1982
The Committee on Substance Abuse and Habitual Behaviour of the NAS
reviewed in great detail all aspects of the issue of marijuana use in the
United States. The group of
experts from the fields of medicine, law, addiction treatment, business and
public policy made the following recommendations:
·
Excessive marijuana use can cause harm, but such use is
rare.
·
On balance, the prohibition on marijuana is socially
and personally destructive.
·
Widespread uncontrolled use would likely not occur with
decriminalization.
·
Greater emphasis should be placed on public education
and informal social controls, both of which have a greater impact on use than
the criminal law.
·
States should be permitted to set up their own
regulatory systems for marijuana, similar to the systems in place for alcohol.
Federal criminal penalties relating to marijuana should be removed and
each state could impose regulations concerning hours of sale, age limits and
taxation.
G.
Research Advisory Panel for the State of California – 1989
This panel was appointed by the state legislature to regulate all
research on controlled substances. In
its 1989 report, it commented negatively on the prohibitionist approach
concluding that it had been “manifestly unsuccessful.”
The panel recommended the legislature consider legislation aimed at the
regulation and decriminalization of drug use.
Suggestions for initial action included:
·
Permit the possession of syringes and needles.
·
Permit the cultivation of marijuana for personal use.
·
In order to project a disapproval of drug use, the sale
or consumption of alcohol in all state-supported institutions should be
prohibited.
H.
New York County Lawyers Association – 1996
The Drug Policy Task Force, sponsored by the New York County Lawyers’
Association, commenced its operations in 1993.
The Task Force was established as a “blue‑ribbon” panel of
prominent and respected individuals, including lawyers, judges and drug policy
experts. In October 1996 it published a detailed report that examined
the economic and social costs of the war on drugs, its impact on women and
people of colour, its effect on the integrity of government and the public
health consequences.
Its recommendations included:
·
Replace the
“penal” approach to drug policy with medical policy models that view
substance abuse as primarily a public health issue.
·
Adopt a more
rational and compassionate approach to drug policy, founded upon the humane
treatment of substance abusers and their families.
·
Apply
cost-benefit analyses to all policies to ensure that the policy is unlikely to
cause more harm than the use of the drug.
·
Repeal
mandatory minimum sentences for non-violent drug offenders.
·
Establish and
improve diversionary and treatment programs and other alternatives to
incarceration for non-violent drug offenders.
·
Move from the
“zero tolerance” policy to one that follows “harm reduction”
principles.
·
Reject the
notion that law enforcement efforts can eliminate drug use and instead
redirect policing towards violent crime.
·
Implement
public education campaigns that counteract inaccurate and misleading drug war
propaganda. Provide access to
information about the safe use of controlled substances and how to reduce the
harms associated with such use.
·
Decriminalize
marijuana or, at the very least, permit its medical use.
The economic and social costs of enforcing penal sanctions for
possession of this relatively harmless drug can no longer be justified.
·
Severely
curtail the current forfeiture laws.
I.
National Academy of Sciences, Institute of Medicine – 1999
In a response to a request from the White House Office of National Drug
Control Policy, the NAS conducted a review of the scientific evidence relating
to the potential health benefits of marijuana.
In its report entitled “Marijuana and Medicine:
Assessing the Scientific Base,” the NAS was unable to determine based
on current scientific knowledge whether marijuana relieves health problems or
is safe for medical use. The NAS
was able to state the following:
·
Cannabinoids
likely have a natural role in pain modulation.
·
The brain
develops tolerance to cannabinoids.
·
Animal
research demonstrates a narrower potential for dependence than with the
opiates, cocaine or nicotine.
·
Withdrawal
symptoms were observed in animals, but appear to be minor compared to opiates
or benzodiazepines. A distinctive
marijuana withdrawal syndrome has been identified but it is mild and
short-lived.
·
Scientific
data indicates potential therapeutic value of marijuana for pain relief,
control of nausea and appetite stimulation.
Smoked marijuana, however, is a crude delivery system that also
delivers harmful substances.
·
Marijuana is
not a completely benign substance, but with the exception of the harms
associated with smoking, the adverse effects are within the range of effects
tolerated for other medications.
·
There is no
conclusive evidence that the drug effects of marijuana are causally linked to
the subsequent use of other drugs. While
marijuana use typically precedes the initiation of other illicit drugs, it is
usually not the first “gateway.” Typically,
alcohol and cigarette use precedes experimentation with marijuana.
· Further research, particularly clinical trials, should be conducted on the potential benefits of marijuana
.
APPENDIX 1 – Selected Data
A.
Trends and Patterns of Illegal Drug Use
Estimated
Domestic U.S. Drug Consumption (in Metric Tons)([33])
Year |
Cocaine |
Heroin |
Marijuana |
Methamphetamine |
1996 |
288 |
12.4 |
874 |
14.3 |
1997 |
312 |
13.1 |
960 |
11.9 |
1998 |
291 |
12.5 |
952 |
15.9 |
1999 |
276 |
12.9 |
982 |
15.5 |
2000 |
269 |
12.9 |
1,009 |
15.5 |
1997
National Household Survey on Drug Abuse:
Past Illicit Drug Use([34])
Respondent
Age |
Ever
Used |
Past
Year |
Past
Month |
12-17 |
23.7% |
18.8% |
11.4% |
18-25 |
45.4 |
25.3 |
14.7 |
26-34 |
50.8 |
14.3 |
7.4 |
35
and over |
31.5 |
6.1 |
3.6 |
1998
Drug Use Amount High School Seniors([35])
Drug |
Ever
Used |
Past
Year |
Past
Month |
Marijuana |
49.1% |
37.5% |
22.8% |
Cocaine |
9.3 |
5.7 |
2.4 |
Crack |
4.4 |
2.5 |
1.0 |
Stimulants |
16.4 |
10.1 |
4.6 |
LSD |
12.6 |
7.6 |
3.2 |
PCP |
3.9 |
2.1 |
1.0 |
Heroin |
2.0 |
1.0 |
0.5 |
Drug
Prices and Purity Levels: Selected
Years 1981-1998([36])
Purchase
Amount |
1981 Price/Purity (per
pure gram) |
1988 Price/Purity (per
pure gram) |
1996 Price/Purity (per
pure gram) |
1997 Price/Purity (per
pure gram) |
1998 Price/Purity (per
pure gram) |
Cocaine |
|||||
1 g or less |
$378.70/40.02% |
$218.33/75.99% |
$159.05/72.5% |
$178.97/64.72% |
$169.25/71.23% |
10-100 g |
191.35/59.59 |
78.84/83.53 |
49.45/68.44 |
45.58/67.05 |
44.30/65.92 |
Heroin |
|||||
0.1 g or less |
3,114.80/4.69 |
2,874.19/19.22 |
2,175.88/23.95 |
2,114.97/25.24 |
1,798.80/24.29 |
1-10 g |
1,194.05/19.1 |
947.32/39.48 |
373.30/45.21 |
327.88/45.38 |
317.97/51.33 |
Marijuana |
|||||
10 g or less |
$6.41 |
$12.50 |
$10.42 |
$10.00 |
$10.41 |
100-999 g |
2.75 |
3.41 |
2.95 |
2.63 |
2.59 |
National
Drug Control Budget([37])
Year |
Amount
(in $US billions) |
1999 |
17.1 |
2000 |
17.9 |
2001 |
18.1 |
2002 |
19.2 |
Total
Estimated Arrests and Drug Arrests, 1989-99([38])
Year |
Total
Arrests |
Arrests
for all drug violations |
Distribution
of arrests for drug violations |
||||||
Heroin/Cocaine |
Marijuana |
Other
Drugs |
|||||||
Number |
Percent |
Sale |
Possession |
Sale |
Possession |
Sale |
Possession |
||
1989 |
14,340,900 |
1,351,700 |
9.4 |
19.1 |
34.7 |
6.2 |
23.1 |
7.0 |
9.8 |
1990 |
14,195,100 |
1,089,500 |
7.6 |
21.0 |
33.3 |
6.1 |
23.9 |
4.5 |
11.2 |
1991 |
14,211,900 |
1,010,000 |
7.1 |
22.5 |
32.8 |
6.1 |
22.4 |
4.8 |
11.5 |
1992 |
14,075,100 |
1,066,400 |
7.5 |
20.6 |
32.4 |
6.6 |
25.5 |
4.6 |
10.4 |
1993 |
14,036,300 |
1,126,300 |
8.0 |
19.2 |
31.1 |
6.2 |
27.6 |
4.3 |
11.6 |
1994 |
14,648,700 |
1,351,400 |
9.2 |
16.8 |
30.3 |
5.8 |
29.8 |
4.1 |
13.2 |
1995 |
15,119,800 |
1,476,100 |
9.7 |
14.7 |
27.8 |
5.8 |
34.1 |
4.4 |
13.3 |
1996 |
15,168,100 |
1,506,200 |
9.9 |
14.2 |
25.6 |
6.3 |
36.6 |
4.3 |
13.3 |
1997 |
15,284,300 |
1,583,600 |
10.3 |
10.3 |
25.4 |
5.6 |
38.3 |
4.7 |
15.8 |
1998 |
14,528,300 |
1,559,100 |
10.7 |
11.0 |
25.6 |
5.4 |
38.4 |
4.8 |
14.8 |
1999 |
14,031,070 |
1,532,200 |
10.9 |
10.0 |
24.5 |
5.5 |
40.5 |
4.1 |
15.4 |
Adults
in Custody of State or Federal Prisons or Local Jails, 1989-99([39])
Year |
State
Prisons |
Federal
Prisons |
Total
State & Federal Prisons |
Percent
of prisoners who are drug offenders |
Local
Jails |
|
Federal |
State |
|||||
1989 |
629,995 |
53,387 |
683,382 |
49.9 |
19.1 |
395,553 |
1990 |
684,544 |
58,838 |
743,382 |
53.5 |
21.7 |
405,320 |
1991 |
728,605 |
63,930
|
792,545 |
55.9 |
21.3 |
426,479 |
1992 |
778,495 |
72,071 |
850,566 |
58.9 |
22.1 |
444,584 |
1993 |
828,566 |
80,815 |
909,381 |
59.2 |
22.1 |
459,804 |
1994 |
904,647 |
85,500 |
990,147 |
60.5 |
22.4 |
486,474 |
1995 |
989,004 |
89,538 |
1,078,542 |
59.9 |
22.7 |
507,044 |
1996 |
1,032,440 |
95,088 |
1,127,528 |
60.0 |
22.7 |
518,492 |
1997 |
1,059,588 |
99,175 |
1,176,922 |
62.6 |
20.7 |
567,079 |
1998 |
1,178,978 |
123,041 |
1,232,900 |
58.7 |
20.7 |
592,462 |
1999 |
1,209,123 |
135,246 |
1,366,369 |
57.8 |
Unavailable |
605,943 |
C.
Correctional Populations in the United States: Selected Statistics for 1997([40])
In 1997, an estimated 5.7 million adult residents of the U.S. (or
approximately 2.8% of all U.S. adult residents) were under some form of
correctional supervision. Approximately
70% were supervised in the community, through probation or parole.
About 9.0% of black adults were under correctional supervision; for
white adults, the figure was 2.0% and for other races it totalled 1.3%.
D.
Federal Drug Prosecutions: Selected Statistics for 1999([41])
During 1999 U.S. attorneys initiated investigations involving 117,994
suspects. 32% of these suspects
were investigated for drug offences. Suspects
in criminal matters involving drug offences were more likely to be prosecuted
in a U.S. district court (77%) as opposed to suspects involved in violent
offences (59%), public order offences (53%) or property offences (50%).
Of those convicted of felony drug offences in federal court in 1999,
93% received prison sentences. The
average sentence of all offenders sentenced in federal court in 1999 was 57.8
months; for drug offenders, the average was 75.4 months.
E.
DEA Seizures of Non-Drug Property – 1997([42])
In fiscal year 1997, the Drug Enforcement Agency made 15,860 seizures
of non‑drug property pursuant to drug forfeiture laws.
The total value of this property is estimated at $552 million.
Type
of Asset |
Number
of Seizures |
Value
($) |
Currency |
8,123 |
284,680,029 |
Other financial
instruments |
507 |
73,602,092 |
Real Property |
748 |
108,833,498 |
Vehicles |
3,695 |
47,379,874 |
Vessels |
111 |
5,884,754 |
Aircraft |
24 |
8,945,000 |
Other
Conveyance |
172 |
1,734,731 |
Other |
2,480 |
1,734,731 |
Appendix 2
State
by State List of Marijuana Penalties([43])
The following guide lists penalties for some, but not all, state
marijuana offences. “Possession”
in this appendix refers to possession for personal use.
Penalties for possession with intent to traffic, distribute or sell
will result in more significant sentences.
Medical marijuana exemptions are discussed in the main body of this
paper. Note as well the following
abbreviations:
“C” – Conditional Release. The
state allows conditional sentencing or diversion for people facing a first
prosecution. Usually, this serves
to prevent a criminal record.
“D” – Decriminalization. The
state has decriminalized marijuana to a limited degree.
Typically, this means that no prison time or criminal record will
result from a first offence of possessing a small amount for personal use.
Often the conduct is treated like a minor traffic violation.
“MMS” – Mandatory minimum sentence.
The judge must sentence the defendant to at least the MMS.
ALABAMA
Possession:
</=
1 kg. for personal consumption: 0 - 1
year; $2,000
</= 1 kg. under another charge: 1 - 10
years; $2,000
Cultivation or delivery or sale:
>
2.2 lbs.: 3 years MMS, possible
10 - 99 years; $25,000
> 100 lbs.: 5 years MMS;
$50,000
> 500 lbs.: 15 years MMS,
$200,000
> 1000 lbs.: life MMS
Sale:
To
minors: 2 - 20 years;
$10,000
Within 3 miles of a school: 5
years*
Within 3 miles of a public housing project:
5 years*
*These sentences run consecutive to other sentences and cannot be probated.
Drug trafficking enterprise:
1st offense:
25 years - life; $50,000 - $1,000,000
2nd offense: life MMS
Paraphernalia possession: 0 - 1
year; $2,000
Driver’s license suspended 6 months.
ALASKA
Possession:
<
8 oz.: 0 - 90 days;
$1,000
>/= 8 oz.: 0 - 1
year; $5,000
>/= 1 lb.: 0 - 5
years; $50,000
>/= 25 plants: 0 - 5
years, $50,000
On a school bus: 0 - 5
years; $50,000
Within 500 feet of school or recreation center: 0 - 5 years; $50,000
Manufacture or delivery or possession with intent to manufacture or
deliver:
<
0.5 oz. for remuneration: 0 - 1
year; $5,000
>/= 0.5 oz.: 0 - 1
year; $5,000
>/= 1 oz.: 0 - 5
years; $50,000
Maintaining
a structure or dwelling for manufacturing or delivery:
0 - 5 years; $50,000
Suspended
imposition of sentence with 2 - 3 years of probation available for
1st offense if offense is a misdemeanor.
If the referendum of 1990 is overturned and the Ravin decision
reinstated, </= 4 oz. will be decriminalized for personal possession.
ARIZONA
Possession or use:
<2
lbs.: probation*; $750 - $150,000.
Possible: drug
“rehabilitation,” community service, urine tests.
Possession for sale:
<2 lbs.:
1.5 - 3 years; $750 - $150,000
>/= 2 lbs.: 2.5 - 7
years; $750 - $150,000
>4 lbs.: 4 - 10
years; $750 - $150,000
Sale or delivery for sale or transport for sale:
<2 lbs.:
2.5 - 7 years; $750 - $150,000
>/= 2 lbs.: 4 - 10
years; $750 - $150,000
Possession
or sale in a “drug free zone,” i.e., within 300 feet of a school, any
public property within 1000 feet of a school, or at a school bus stop or on
any bus which transports pupils to school:
1 additional year of prison plus $2000 - $150,000.
Production
or cultivation:
<2
lbs.: probation or 9 months - 2
years; $750 - $150,000
>/= 2 lbs.: 1.5 - 3
years; $750 - $150,000
>4 lbs.: 2.5 - 7
years; $750 - $150,000
The Drug Medicalization, Prevention and Control Act of 1996
(Proposition 200) became effective on July 21, 1997.
The Act provides that a 1st or 2nd time marijuana offender may not be
imprisoned for simple possession or use, regardless of amount of marijuana.
However, a court may sentence the person to probation* with court
supervised drug “rehabilitation,” a fine of $750 - $150,000,
and/or community service. A
person can be incarcerated if charged outside of the “possession or use”
category.
Necessity defense:
Section 13 - 417 of the Arizona Criminal and Traffic Law
Manual, 1997 - 1998 edition, arguably allows a patient to tell a
jury that s/he uses marijuana for medical purposes.
*Probation: People placed
on probation or early release generally must perform 24 - 360 hours
of community service.
ARKANSAS
(C)
Possession: </= 1 oz.:
0 - 1 year; $1,000
Cultivation or delivery or sale:
> 1 oz.:
4 - 10 years; $25,000
>/= 10 lbs.: 5 - 20
years; $15,000 - $50,000
>/= 100 lbs.: 6 - 30
years; $15,000 - $100,000
Sale to minor: 5 - 20
years; $15,000
Sale within 1000 feet of a school, public park, community or recreation
center, skating rink, or video arcade: 5 - 20
years; $15,000
Driver’s license suspended 6 months.
CALIFORNIA
(D)
Possession:
</=
28.5 grams: $100; no booking if
you can show officer I.D. and promise to appear in court.
</= 28.5 grams on school grounds when school is open:
$250; 2nd offense: 10 days; $500
> 28.5 grams: 0 - 6
months; $500
Possession for sale: no specified
amount: 16 months; 2 - 3
years probation.
Cultivation:
For
personal use only: stay of
imposition of the conviction, drug education, charges dropped.
Not for personal use: 0 - 16
months; 2 - 3 years probation possible. No plant number or weight breakdown.
Selling, giving away, importing, or transporting into California:
2 - 4 years.
Possession or cultivation or transportation is legal upon a doctor’s
recommendation or approval.
COLORADO
(D)
Possession:
< 1 oz.:
$100 plus surcharge
>/= 1 oz.: 0 - 2
years in county jail; $500 - $5,000 fine plus surcharge
>/= 8 oz.: 1 - 4
years; $1,000 - $100,000 plus surcharge
Generally, one prior conviction over 1 oz. doubles the penalties.
Cultivation or manufacture or delivery or sale:
</= 100 lbs.:
2 - 8 years in Department of Corrections; $2,000 - $500,000
plus surcharge >100 lbs.: 24
years MMS; $5,000 - $1,000,000
Two prior violations involving manufacture:
2 years MMS
Proof of sale: 1 - 16
years
Sale or giving marijuana to person aged 15 years or younger:
2 - 8 years;
$2,000 - $500,000 plus up to another $5,000
Paraphernalia:
Sale or possession of
paraphernalia: $100 plus
surcharge
Extraordinary mitigating or aggravating circumstances allow the court to
sentence outside proscribed sentencing ranges.
CONNECTICUT
Possession:
</= 4 oz.:
0 - 1 year; $1,000. 2nd
offense: 0 - 5 years; $3,000
>/= 4 oz.: 0 - 5
years; $2,000. 2nd offense:
0 - 10 years; $5,000
Possession of any amount within 1500 feet of a school:
add 2 years MMS consecutive to other incarceration
Cultivation or delivery or sale:
< 1 kg.:
0 - 7 years; $25,000
>/= 1 kg.: 5 - 20
years MMS; $2,000
>/= 4 oz., 2nd offense: 0 - 10
years; $5,000
Paraphernalia
possession: 90 days; $500
Within 1500 feet of a school:
additional 1 year MMS consecutive to other incarceration.
Professional
licenses suspended.
Medical necessity, § 21a - 253, C.G.S. states a person may
possess a quantity of marijuana less than or equal to that quantity prescribed
by a physician who is licensed to supply marijuana for treating glaucoma or
side effects of chemotherapy.
DELAWARE
(C)
Possession of any amount: 0 - 6
months; $1,150
Cultivation: 0 - 5
years; $10,000
Trafficking:
>/= 5 lbs.:
3 years MMS; $25,000
>/= 100 lbs.: 5 years MMS;
$50,000
>/= 500 lbs.: 15 years MMS;
$100,000
Delivery:
Of any amount:
5 years; $10,000
Delivery to a minor: 0 - 5
years
If minor is under 16, 1
year MMS
If minor is under 14, 2 years MMS
Delivery or distribution
within 1000 feet of school: 0 - 30
years; $250,000
Delivery or distribution or possession within 300 feet of park land, a
park, or recreation area: 0 ‑ 15
years; $250,000
Paraphernalia:
Possession:
0 - 1 year; $2,300
Manufacture or delivery: 0 - 2
years
Delivery to a minor: 0 - 5
years
Maintaining
a dwelling or vehicle in which marijuana smoking or other marijuana related
conduct occurs: 0 - 3
years; court’s discretion on fine.
Suspended
sentences possible except for trafficking.
DISTRICT
OF COLUMBIA (C)
Possession of any amount:
0 - 180
days; $1,000. 1st time possession
offenders are eligible for probation followed by dismissal.
Cultivation or delivery or sale of any amount: 0 - 1 year; $10,000
Sale to minor: penalty
doubles
Paraphernalia:
Possession:
0 - 1 year; $500
Delivery to a minor: 0 - 8
years; $15,000
Driver’s license suspended 6 months.
FLORIDA
Possession:
</= 20 g.:
0 - 1 year; $1,000
> 20 g.: 0 - 5
years; $5,000
Sale
of any amount: 0 - 5 years; $5000
Delivery:
</=
20 g. without remuneration: 0 - 1
year; $1,000
Paraphernalia to minor: 15 years;
$10,000
Within 200 feet of school, public housing, or public park:
15 years; $10,000
Trafficking:
>/=
50 - </= 2000 lbs.: 0 - 30
years; $25,000
> 2,000 lbs.: 0 - 30
years; larger fine
> 10,000 lbs.: >/= 15 years
MMS; $200,000
Paraphernalia
possession: 0 - 1 year;
$1,000
Driver’s
license suspended 6 months.
Professional
licenses suspended.
A
vehicle can be confiscated for any felony amount.
GEORGIA
Possession or sale:
< 1 oz.:
0 - 1 year; $1,000. If
arrested in a municipality you can choose to appear in city court instead of
state court: maximum 60 days; $500 >/= 1 oz.: 1 - 10 years; $1,000
>5 lb.: 3 years MMS; $25,000
>100 lb.: 5 years MMS; $50,000
>500 lb.: 15 years MMS;
$100,000
Paraphernalia possession:
0 - 1 year;
$1,000
Third offense: 1 - 5
years; $5,000
Cultivation: 0 - 10
years; $100,000
Trafficking:
Includes the sale, manufacture, growth, delivery, import of marijuana
into Georgia or any quantity of marijuana > 50 lbs:
> 50 lbs. -
< 2,000 lbs.: 5 years MMS plus
$100,000
>/= 2,000 lbs. - < 10,000 lbs.: 7 years MMS plus $250,000
>/= 10,000 lbs.: 15 years MMS
plus $1,000,000
Use
of a communications facility (i.e., telephone, radio, etc.) during drug felony
may add 1 - 4 years; $30,000
Manufacture
or distribute or dispense or possess with intent to distribute within 1000
feet of an elementary or secondary school, a school board used for elementary
or secondary education, property owned or leased by an elementary or secondary
school, or any park, playground, recreational center, drug free commercial
zone: 0 - 20 years;
$20,000
Manufacture or distribution involving a minor: 5 - 20 years; $20,000
Driver’s license suspended at least 6 months; license reinstated only
with “treatment.”
Professional licenses suspended.
2nd drug felony is punishable by life in prison.
HAWAII
(C)
Possession:
< 1 oz.:
0 - 30 days; $1,000
> 1 oz.: 0 - 1 year;
$2,000
> 2.2. lbs.: 0 - 5
years; $10,000
> 40 lbs.: 0 - 10
years; $25,000
Cultivation:
</= 25 plants:
0 - 5 years, $10,000
100 or more plants: 0 - 10
years; $25,000
Sale:
<
2 oz.: 1 year; $2,000
>/= 2 oz.: 5 years; $10,000
> 2.2 lbs.: 10 years; $25,000
Sale within 750 feet of a school or within 10 feet of a parked school vehicle:
0 - 5 years; 2nd offense:
2 - 10 years
Any
marijuana in a vehicle causes all passengers to be charged with possession
unless the marijuana is found on the person of an occupant.
Distribution to minors: 10
years; $25,000
“Drug Demand Reduction Assessments” are additional fines.
IDAHO
(C)
Using
marijuana or being under the influence of marijuana in a public place:
0 - 6 months or $1,000
Possession:
<
3 oz.: 0 - 1 year;
$1,000
> 3 oz.: 0 - 5
years; $10,000
by a prisoner: 1 - 5
years; $1,000
by a minor (misdemeanor amounts): 30
days detention; $300
Paraphernalia possession: 0 - 1
year; $1,000
Cultivation or delivery or sale:
< 1 lbs. or 0 - 24
plants: 0 - 5 years;
$15,000
>/= 1 lbs. or 25 - 49 plants:
1 year MMS; $5,000
>/= 5 lbs. or 50 - 99 plants:
3 years MMS; $10,000
>/= 25 lbs. or >/= 100 plants: 5
years MMS; $15,000
Possible maximum: 15 years;
$50,000
Manufacture or sale of paraphernalia:
9 years; $30,000
Sale to minor: prison time
doubles.
Sale on school grounds: penalty
doubles.
A
person’s presence in a place where he or she knows that illegal drug
activity is taking place is punishable by 0 - 3 months; $300
Required evaluation with all drug convictions; court can order treatment.
ILLINOIS
(C)
Possession:
< 2.5 grams:
0 - 30 days; $500
>/= 2.5 grams: 0 - 6
months; $500
>/= 10 grams: 0 - 1
year in county jail; $1,000
>/= 30 grams: 1 - 3
years in penitentiary or probation; $10,000
>/= 500 grams: 2 - 5
years or probation; $50,000
>/= 2,000 grams: 3 - 7
years or probation; $100,000
>/= 5,000 grams: 4 - 15
years or probation; $150,000
Cultivation:
1 - 5 plants:
0 - 1 year; $1,000
5 - 20 plants: 1 - 3
years; $10,000
20 - 50 plants: 2 - 5
years; $10,000
> 50 plants: 3 - 7
years; $100,000
Manufacture or delivery:
<
2.5 grams: 0 - 6
months; $500
> 2.5 grams: 0 - 1
year; $1,000
> 10 grams: 1 - 3
years; $10,000
> 30 grams: 2 - 5
years; $50,000
> 500 grams - < 2,500 grams:
3 - 7 years; $100,000
Trafficking = bringing > 2,500 grams to manufacture or deliver:
double penalty and fine.
Sale to minor: double
penalty and fine.
Sale within 1,000 feet of school, public park, or public housing or sale
in a vehicle used for school purposes: 6 - 30
years no probation; $500,000
Calculated criminal conspiracy: 6 - 30
years no probation; $500,000; mandatory forfeiture.
INDIANA
(C)
Possession:
</=
30 grams: 0 - 1 year;
$5,000; conditional discharge possible
> 30 g or 2nd possession of any amount:
6 months - 3 years; $10,000
Paraphernalia:
Possession:
$500
“Reckless possession of paraphernalia”:
0 - 1 years plus </= 1.5 years for aggravating circumstances or
minus </= 1 year for mitigating circumstances; $5,000
Manufacture or sale of paraphernalia:
.5 years; $10,000
Cultivation or delivery or sale:
</=
30 grams: 0 - 1 year;
$5,000
> 30 grams: 6 months - 3
years; $10,000
>/= 10 lbs.: 2 - 8
years; $10,000
Sale to minor: .5 - 3 years;
$10,000
Sale within 1,000 feet of school, on a school bus, in a public park or a
family housing complex: 2 - 8
years; $10,000
Driver’s license suspended 6 months - 2 years (hardship
license available)
Knowingly visiting a place where drugs are used:
0 - 180 days; $1,000
IOWA
(C)
Possession or Sale:
< 50 kg.:
0 - 5 years; $1,000 - $5,000
>/= 50 kg.: 0 - 10
years; $1,000 - $50,000
>/= 100 kg.: 0 - 25
years; $5,000 - $100,000
> 1,000 kg.: 0 - 50
years; $1,000,000
Sale to minor within 1000 feet of school or public park:
10 - 25 years MMS
Driver’s license suspended 6 months.
KANSAS
(C)
Possession:
Any amount of marijuana for
personal use: 0 - 1
year; $2,500
2nd conviction: 10 - 42
months which can double with aggravating factors; $100,000
Possession with intent to sell, or cultivation, or sale:
14 - 51 months
which can double with aggravating factors; $300,000
Possession or attempt to buy or sell >/= 100 plants or 100 lbs.:
21 - 27 months
which can double with aggravating factors; $300,000
Possession with intent to sell or sale within 1,000 feet of a school:
46 - 83 months
which can double with aggravating factors; $300,000
Any
marijuana related conduct which involves a minor or occurs in the presence of
a minor may count as aggravating factor and increase the sentence.
Paraphernalia:
For
personal use: 0 - 1
year; $2,500
For planting or growing more than 5 plants:
10 - 42 months which can double with aggravating factors;
$100,000
KENTUCKY
(C)
Possession:
< 8 oz.:
90 days - 1 year; $500; 2nd offense:
1 - 5 years
Possession
with intent to sell (possession of >/= 8 oz. is considered prima facie
evidence of intent to sell)
>/= 8 oz.:
1 - 5 years; $10,000; 2nd offense:
5 - 10 years
>/= 5 lbs.: 5 - 10
years; $10,000; 2nd offense: 10 - 20
years
Sale:
To a minor:
5 - 10 years; 2nd offense:
10 - 20 years
Within 1,000 feet of a school: 1 - 5
years; $3,000 - $5,000
Trafficking:
</= 8 oz.:
1 year
< 5 lbs.: 1 - 5
years
>/= 5 lbs.: 5 - 10
years
Paraphernalia: 90 days - 1
year; 2nd offense: 1 - 5
years
Cultivation:
<
5 plants: 90 days - 1
year; $500; 2nd offense: 1 - 5
years; $5,000
>/= 5 plants: 1 - 5
years; $3,000 - $5,000
>/= 5 plants, 2nd offense: 5 - 10
years; $3,000 - $5,000; 2nd offense:
5 - 10 years
Defendants who are minors: driver’s
license suspended 1 - 2 years.
Tax: Kentucky taxes
marijuana plants and substance.
LOUISIANA
(C)
Possession (no quantity specified; usually under 2 oz. in one container):
1st
offense: 0 - 6 months;
$500
2nd offense: 0 - 5
years hard labor; $2,000
3rd offense: 0 - 20
years hard labor
Possession with intent to distribute, cultivation or sale:
< 60 lbs.:
5 - 30 years hard labor; $50,000
>/= 60 lbs.: 10 - 60
years MMS hard labor; and $50,000 - $100,000
>/= 2,000 lbs.: 20 - 80
years MMS hard labor; $100,000 - $400,000
>/= 10,000 lbs.: 50 - 80
years MMS hard labor; $400,000 - $1,000,000
Sale to minor: Doubled
penalties
Felony possession or sale within 1,000 feet of school:
Driver’s license
suspended 90 days - 1 year
1st offense: maximum fine and a
minimum of half of the maximum allowable term for offense served before pardon
or parole.
Subsequent convictions: Maximum
fine and maximum sentence without parole, probation, or suspended sentence.
MAINE
(D)
Possession:
< 1.25 oz.:
$400
> 1.25 oz. = evidence of intent to furnish marijuana.
See penalties for sale.
Paraphernalia possession: 0 - 6
months; $200
Cultivation:
100 - 500 plants:
1 - 5 years MMS; $5,000
>/= 500 plants: 2 - 10
years MMS; $20,000
Delivery or Sale:
<
1.25 oz.: 0 - 1 year;
$1,000
>/= 1.25 oz.: 0 - 1
year; $2,000
>/= 2 lb.: 1 - 5
years MMS; $5,000
>/= 20 lb.: 2 - 10
years MMS; $20,000
Sale to minor: 5 years;
$5,000
Possible suspension of professional license.
Court can override minimums when sentencing first time defendants who
present no danger to the public and who would suffer substantial injustice if
sentenced to a MMS.
MARYLAND
Possession or use of any amount: 0 - 1
year; $1,000
Paraphernalia possession: $500
Cultivation or Delivery or Sale:
< 50 lbs.:
0 - 5 years; $15,000
>/= 50 lbs.: 5 years MMS
Smuggling into state:
>/= 100 lbs.:
0 - 25 years; $50,000
Using a minor: 0 - 20
years; $20,000
MASSACHUSETTS
(C)
Possession of any amount:
1st offense:
probation.
Subsequent offense: 0 - 6
months; $500. Probation possible.
Cultivation or delivery or sale:
< 50 lbs.:
0 - 2 years; $5,000
>/= 50 lbs.: 2.5 - 15
years; $10,000; 1 year MMS
>/= 100 lbs.: 3 - 15
years MMS; $25,000
>/= 10,000 lbs.: 10 - 15
years; $200,000
Sale to minor: 2.5 - 15
years; $1,000 - $25,000
Sale within 1,000 feet of school: 2.5 - 15
years; $1,000 - $10,000
Paraphernalia:
Manufacture or sale:
1 - 2 years; $500 - $5,000
Sale to minor: 3 - 5
years; $1,000 - $5,000
License suspensions:
Any
offense: at least 6 months.
Delivery or sale of any amount: driver’s
license suspended 2 years.
Delivery or sale over 50 lbs.: driver’s
license suspended 5 years.
MICHIGAN
(C)
Use: 0 - 90 days;
$100
Possession of any amount: 0 - 1
year; $1,000 (probation available)
Cultivation or delivery or sale:
Any amount:
0 - 4 years; $2,000
Sale to minor: penalty doubles
Sale within 500 feet of school: penalty
doubles
Manufacture or sale of paraphernalia:
3 months; $5,000
License suspensions:
Any offense: 6
months.
*City of Ann Arbor is a decriminalized city. ($50 civil fine)
MINNESOTA
(C, D)
Possession:
</=
42.5 grams: $200 and “drug
education”
< 10 kg.: 0 - 5
years; $10,000
>/= 10 kg.: 0 - 20
years; $250,000
>/= 50 kg.: 0 - 25
years; $500,000
> 100 kg.: 0 - 30
years; $1,000,000
Possession of more than 1.4 grams in a motor vehicle is punishable by 0 - 1
year in prison and a $1,000 fine.
Sale or delivery:
>/=
2 kg.: 0 - 5 years;
$10,000
>/= 5 kg.: 0 - 20
years; $250,000
>/= 25 kg.: 0 - 25
years; $500,000
> 50 kg.: 0 - 30
years; $1,000,000
Sale to minor: 0 - 20
years; $250,000
Sale within 300 feet or one city block of school, public park, or public
housing: 15 ‑ 30 years;
$100,000 - $1,000,000
Driver’s
license suspended 30 days.
MISSISSIPPI
(D)
Possession:
</= 1 oz.:
$100 - $250
> 1 oz.: 0 - 1 year;
$1,000
>/= 1 kg.: 0 - 20
years; $1,000 - $1,000,000
Additional penalties for possession in any part of a motor vehicle except the
trunk.
Paraphernalia
possession: 0 - 6
months; $500
Sale
or delivery:
<
1 oz.: 0 - 3 years;
$3,000
>/= 1 oz.: 0 - 20
years; $30,000
>/= 1 kg.: 0 - 30
years; $100,000 - $1,000,000
> 10 lbs.: life without parole
Sale to person under 21: penalty
doubles
Sale within 1,500 feet of school: penalty
doubles
Driver’s
license suspended 6 months.
MISSOURI
(C)
Possession:
</=
35 grams: 0 - 1 year;
$1,000
> 35 grams: 0 - 7
years; $5,000
> 30 kg.: 5 - 15
years
> 100 kg.: 10 years - life
Sale:
< 5
grams: 0 - 7 years;
$5,000
> 5 grams: 5 - 15
years
> 30 kg.: 10 years - life
> 100 kg.: life without parole
Sale to minor: 5 - 15
years
Sale within 1,000 feet of school or public housing project:
10 - 30 years
Additional penalties for sale near government-assisted or public housing.
Cultivation
of any amount: 5 - 15
years
Paraphernalia:
Possession:
0 - 1 year; $1,000
Sale of paraphernalia:
0 - 5 years; $5,000
MONTANA
Possession:
</=
60 grams marijuana or < 1 gram hashish:
0 - 6 months; $100 - $500
Subsequent convictions: 0 - 3
years; $1,000
>60 grams: 0 - 20
years; $50,000
Paraphernalia possession: 0 - 6
months; $500
Manufacture, cultivation and sale (intent to sell triggered at >/= 1
kg.):
</= 1 lb.:
0 - 10 years and $50,000
> 1 lb. or > 30 plants: 2
years MMS - life and $50,000
Subsequent violations: up to two
times the prison term plus $100,000 for the crime.
Sale to minor: 4 years - life;
$50,000
Sale within 1,000 feet of school: 3
years - life; $50,000
Continuing
criminal enterprise: additional
penalty equaling 2 - 3 times the length of punishment for the
underlying offense.
NEBRASKA
(D)
Personal use: 0 - 7
days; $500
Possession or sale:
</=
1 oz.: 1st offense:
citation for $100; “drug education” possible
2nd offense: $100 - $500
Third or subsequent offense: 0 - 7
days and $300
> 1 oz.: 0 - 7 days;
$500
> 1 lb.: 0 - 5
years; $10,000
Sale:
Sale to minor increases
penalty for offense to next highest classification.
Enhanced penalty for sale to minor within 1,000 feet of a school, college or
playground, or within 100 feet of a youth center, public swimming pool or
video arcade.
Paraphernalia:
0 - 6 months;
$1,000
Paraphernalia to minor who is at least three years younger:
0 - 1 year; $1,000
Maintaining premises on which marijuana is stored or sold:
0 - 3 months; $500.
NEVADA
(C*)
* Effective July 1, 1999, probation will be no longer be guaranteed.
Possession or use of any amount:
1st offense:
1 - 4 years; $5,000
2nd offense: 1 - 10
years
3rd offense: 1 - 20
years
Cultivation or delivery or sale:
< 100 lbs.:
1st offense: 1 - 20 years
2nd offense: 5 - 20
years; no parole or probation
3rd offense: 15 years - life;
no parole or probation
>/= 100 lbs.: 1 - 5
years; $10,000; no parole or probation
>/= 2,000 lbs.: 1 - 20
years; no parole or probation
>/= 10,000 lbs.: (a) life with
parole eligibility after a minimum of 5 years, or (b) 15 years with parole
eligibility after a minimum of 5 years; $200,000 under either scheme.
Sale: to minor:
1st offense: 1 - 20 years; 2nd offense: life
Sale within 1,000 feet of school, video arcade, public pool, youth
center: penalty doubles.
Paraphernalia possession: 0 - 6
months; $1,000
NEW
HAMPSHIRE (C)
Possession:
Any
amount of marijuana or </= 5 grams hashish:
0 - 1 year; $1,000
> 5 grams hashish: $5,000
Cultivation, delivery or sale:
<
1 oz. marijuana or < 5 grams hashish:
0 - 3 years; $25,000
Subsequent offenses: 0 - 6
years; $50,000
>/= 1 oz. marijuana or >/= 5 grams hashish: 0 - 7 years; $100,000
Subsequent offenses: 0 - 15
years; $200,000
>/= 5 lbs. marijuana or >/= 1 lbs. hashish: 0 - 20 years; $300,000
Subsequent offenses: 0 - 40
years; $500,000
Sale within 1,000 feet of school: up
to double the penalty.
Paraphernalia sale: 0 - 1
year; $1,000
Drug Enterprise Leader: 25
years MMS - life and $500,000 or five times the street value,
whichever is greater.
License suspension:
Possession
with intent to sell: driver’s
license may be revoked for any time period including life, at court’s
discretion.
Minors aged 15 - 17 convicted of possession with intent to sell will
have their license revoked for 1 - 5 years.
Minors aged 15 - 17 convicted of possession, sale, or use may have
their driver’s license revoked or license application denied 60 days - 2
years.
NEW
JERSEY
Possession, use, or under the influence:
< 50 grams:
0 - 6 months; $1,000
> 50 grams: 0 - 18
months; $15,000
Possession or use within 1,000 feet of a school:
if no jail time, then not less than 100 hours of community service.
Manufacture, distribution or possession with intent to distribute:
<
1 oz.: 0 - 18 months;
$7,500
> 1 oz.: 0 - 5
years; $15,000
> 5 lbs.: 5 - 10
years MMS; $100,000
Sale:
To
minor or pregnant female: penalty
may double.
Within 1,000 feet of school:
< 1 oz.:
1 - 5 years MMS
> 1 oz.: 3 years MMS
Driver’s license suspended 6 months - 2 years.
NEW
MEXICO (C)
Possession:
</=
1 oz.: 0 - 15 days and
$50 - $100
Subsequent offenses: 0 - 1
year; $100 - $1,000
> 1 oz.: 0 - 1 year;
$100 - $1,000
>/= 8 oz.: 0 - 18
months; $5,000
Distribution or cultivation:
Small
amounts, no remuneration: same as
possession
</= 100 lbs.: 18 months;
$5,000. Subsequent offenses:
3 years; $5,000
> 100 lbs.: 3 years; $5,000.
Subsequent offenses: 9
years; $10,000
Distribution to a minor: 3 years;
$5,000
Subsequent offenses: 9 years;
$10,000
Sale within 1,000 feet of a drug free school zone:
18 years and $15,000
Paraphernalia:
Possession:
0 - 1 year; $50 - $100
Delivery: 0 - 1; $1,000
Any person over 18 who delivers paraphernalia to a minor who is at least three
years younger: 18 months; $5,000
All first-time offenders eligible for probation, no fine, and expunged
conviction.
NEW
YORK (C, D)
Possession:
</= 25 grams:
non-criminal violation; $100. 2nd
offense: $200
Subsequent offenses: $250; 0 - 15
days
> 25 grams or any amount possessed in public and the marijuana is burning
or open to public view: 0 - 3
months; $500
> 2 oz.: 0 - 1 year;
$1,000
> 8 oz.: 0 - 4
years; $5,000
> 1 lb.: 0 - 7
years; $5,000
> 10 lbs.: 0 - 15
years; $5,000
Delivery or cultivation:
</=
2 grams for no consideration: 0 - 3 months; $500
< 25 grams: 0 - 1
year; $1,000
>/= 25 grams: 0 - 4
years; $5,000
> 4 oz.: 0 - 7
years; $5,000
> 1 lb.: 0 - 15
years; $5,000
Sale to minor: 0 - 7
years; $5,000
Driver’s license suspended 6 months.
NORTH
CAROLINA (C,D)
Possession:
<
0.5 oz.: 0 - 30 days,
suspended sentence possible
> 0.5 oz. or 1/20 oz. of hashish: 1 - 120
days or community service or probation
> 1.5 oz. or 3/20 oz. hashish: 8 - 13
months
> 10 lbs. = trafficking
Trafficking:
<
5 grams for no remuneration: suspended
sentence possible
> 10 lbs.: 25 - 30
months MMS and at least $5,000
>/= 50 lbs.: 35 - 42
months MMS and at least $25,000
>/= 2,000 lbs.: 70 - 84
months MMS and at least $50,000
>/= 10,000 lbs.: 175 - 219
months MMS and least $200,000
Manufacture, cultivation or sale: 4 - 10
months, may be suspended
Enhanced sentences for:
School
zone: Anyone over 21 who sells or
possesses with intent to sell within 300 feet of school property receives an
enhanced sentence.
Pregnant women and minors: Sale
or delivery by someone over 18 to a minor under 16 or to a pregnant female
receives an enhanced sentence.
Paraphernalia possession or sale: 1 - 120
days
**NORTH
DAKOTA (C)
Possession or sale or delivery or cultivation:
<
0.5 oz.: 0 - 30 days;
$1,000
0.5 oz.: 0 - 8 months;
$2,000
1.5 oz.: 0 - 1 year;
$5,000
>/= 100 lb.:
1st
offense: 8 months MMS
2nd offense: 3 years MMS
Subsequent offenses: 10 years MMS
Possession of < 0.5 oz. while operating a motor vehicle:
1 year; $1,000
Anyone over 21 who uses a minor under 18 to produce or distribute any
amount:
1st
offense: 4 years MMS
Subsequent offenses: 5 years MMS
Paraphernalia:
Possession:
0 - 1 year; $2,000
Sale of paraphernalia to minor by someone over 18 who is at least three years
older : 0 - 5 years;
$5,000
Sale within 1,000 feet of school: 4
years; $1,000
First offenders only:
Possession
of </= 1 oz.: Record of a
guilty plea or verdict may be expunged after two years if no further drug or
criminal offenses.
Atypically, North Dakota allows its judges to defer or suspend part or all of
a penalty for a 1st offense, even if the penalty is listed as a MMS.
OHIO
(C, D)
Possession:
<
100 grams: $100
>/= 100 grams: $250
>/= 200 grams: 6 months - 1
year
> 1,000 grams: 1 - 5
years
> 5,000 grams: Presumption of
prison
> 20,000 grams: 8 years MMS
“Corrupting another with drugs”:
6 - 18 months
Sale or cultivation:
<
200 grams: 6 - 12
months, subsequent offenses: 6 - 18
months
</= 1,000 grams: 6 - 18
months, 2nd offense: 1 - 5
years
>/= 5,000 grams - </= 20,000 grams: Presumption of prison
> 20,000 grams: 8 years MMS,
2nd offense: 10 years MMS
Sale to minor: 1 year;
$1,000
Sale within 1,000 feet of school: 10
years MMS
Paraphernalia:
Possession:
0 - 30 days; $250
Sale of paraphernalia to minor: 6
months; $1,000
Driver’s license suspended 6 months - 5 years.
Professional licenses suspended.
OKLAHOMA
(C)
Possession of any amount:
0 - 1
year; $500
2nd offense: 2 - 10
years; $5,000
Cultivation of any amount: 2
years - life; $20,000
Paraphernalia possession: 1
year; $1,000
Sale or delivery:
<
25 lb.: 4 years - life;
$20,000
>/= 25 lbs.: 5 years - life;
$25,000 - $100,000
>/= 1,000 lbs.: 5 years - life;
$100,000 - $500,000
Sale to minor: penalty doubles
Sale within 1,000 feet of school: penalty
doubles
Driver’s license suspended.
OREGON
(C, D)
Possession:
<
1 oz.: $500 - $1,000
> 1 oz.: 0 - 10
years; $200,000
Manufacture: 0 - 20
years
Paraphernalia
possession: 0 - 1 year;
$5,000 criminal fine plus civil fine of $2,000 - $5,000
Delivery:
<
5 grams: $500 - $1,000
> 5 grams: 0 - 1
year; $5,000
> 1 oz.: 0 - 10
years; $200,000
Sale:
Sale
of any amount: 0 - 10
years; $200,000
Sale to minor: 0 - 20
years; $300,000
Sale within 1,000 feet of school: 0 - 20
years; $300,000
PENNSYLVANIA
(C)
Possession:
</= 30 grams:
0 - 30 days; $500
> 30 grams: 0 - 1
year; $5,000
Cultivation, delivery or sale:
Fines will exceed amount listed to as sufficient to exhaust the proceeds of
prohibited drug activity.
Any
amount: 0 - 15 years;
$250,000
>/= 2 lbs. or >/= 10 live plants: 1
year MMS; $5,000
>/= 10 lbs. or >/= 21 live plants:
3 years MMS; $15,000
>/= 50 lbs. or >/= 51 live plants:
5 years MMS; $50,000
Sale:
Sale
to minor: penalty doubles
Sale within 1,000 feet of school or college:
1 - 2 years MMS
Paraphernalia:
Paraphernalia
possession: 0 - 1 year;
$5,000
Sale of paraphernalia to minor: 2
years; $5,000
Driver’s license may be suspended 6 months.
RHODE
ISLAND
Possession:
< 1
kg.: 0 - 1 year; $200 - $500
>/= 1 kg. - </= 5 kg.: 10 - 50
years MMS and up to $500,000
> 5 kg.: 20 years - life
MMS and </= $1,000,000
Manufacture
or possession with intent to deliver: 0 - 30
years; $3,000 - $100,000
Sale
to minor: 1 - 5 years;
</= $10,000
Sale
or possession within 1,000 feet of school:
up to twice the listed penalty, but not to exceed life.
Driving
while in possession of controlled substance:
1st
offense: Driver’s license
suspended six months .
Subsequent offenses: 1 year
suspension
SOUTH
CAROLINA
Possession:
</=
1 oz. marijuana or </= 10 grams hashish:
1st
offense: 0 - 30 days
and $100 - $200
Subsequent offense: 0 - 1;
$200 - $1,000
Possession
or sale of paraphernalia: $500
civil fine
Cultivation:
>/=
100 plants: 25 years MMS - life;
$25,000
> 1,000 plants: 25 years MMS - life;
$50,000
> 10,000 plants: 25 - 30
years MMS; $200,000
Sale
or delivery:
>/=
10 lbs brings presumption of trafficking
> 10 lbs. but < 100 lbs.: 1 - 10
years MMS; $10,000
2nd
offense: 5 - 20 years
MMS; $15,000
Subsequent offenses: 25 years
MMS; $25,000
>/=
100 lbs.: 25 years MMS; $25,000
>/= 2,000 lbs.: 25 years MMS;
$50,000
>/= 10,000 lbs.: 25 - 30
years MMS; $200,000
Sale to a minor: 0 - 10
years; $10,000
Sale within 1/2 mile radius of a school:
0 - 10 years; $10,000
Driver’s license suspended 6 months for marijuana and hashish
convictions.
SOUTH
DAKOTA
Possession:
</=
1 oz.: 0 - 30 days;
$100 (misdemeanor)
< 8 oz.: 0 – 1
year; $1,000 (misdemeanor)
< 1 lb.: 0 – 2
years; $2,000 (felony)
</= 10 lbs.: 0 - 5
years; $5,000 (felony)
> 10 lbs.: 0 - 10
years; $10,000 (felony)
1st
felony: minimum 30 days
imprisonment.
2nd felony: 1 year MMS
Additional
civil penalty of $10,000 for any possession offense. This is in addition to any criminal penalty imposed.
Cultivation or delivery or sale:
Transferring
< 8 oz. without remuneration: 0 - 30
days (misdemeanor)
</= 1 oz.: 15 days - 1
year; $1,000 (misdemeanor)
< 8 oz.: 30 days - 2
years; $2,000 (felony)
< 1 lb.: 30 days - 5
years; $5,000 (felony)
>/= 1 lb.: 30 days - 10
years; $10,000 (felony)
Sale to minor: 5 years MMS;
$5,000
Sale within 500 feet of a school, youth center, public pool, video arcade:
5 years MMS.
Paraphernalia: use or
possession: 30 days; $100
Driver’s license suspended 90 days
TENNESSEE
Possession:
</=
0.5 oz.: 0 - 1 year;
$250 minimum
2nd offense: $500 minimum
Subsequent offense: $750 minimum
Cultivation deliver or Sale:
</=
0.5 oz.: 0 - 1 year;
$250 minimum
> 0.5 oz. or < 2 lbs. hashish: 1 - 5
years; $5,000
>/= 10 lbs. or </= 15 lbs. hashish:
4 - 10 years; $10,000
>/= 70 lbs. or > 15 lbs. hashish: 8 - 12
years and $200,000
>/= 700 lbs. or > 150 lbs. hashish:
$500,000
Sale to minor under age 18: penalty
classification moves one level higher.
Paraphernalia
Possession:
0 - 1 year; $2,500
Sale: 1 - 6 years;
$3,000
Three
prior felony drug convictions may place classify defendant as a “habitual
drug offender.” A habitual drug offender may be sentenced to the next higher
punishment range and may be fined up to an additional $200,000.
TEXAS
Possession:
</=
2 oz.: 0 - 180 days;
$2,000
> 2 oz.: 0 - 1 year;
$4,000
> 4 oz.: 180 days - 2
years; $10,000
> 5 lbs.: 2 - 10
years; $10,000
> 50 lbs.: 2 - 20
years; $10,000
> 2,000 lbs.: 5 - 99
years; $50,000
Sale or delivery:
<
0.25 oz. for no remuneration: 0 - 180
days; $1,500
< 0.25 oz. for remuneration: 0 - 1
year; $3,000
>/= 0.25 oz.: 180 days - 2
years; $10,000
>/= 5 lbs.: 2 - 20
years; $10,000
>/= 50 lbs.: 5 - 99
years; $10,000
>/= 2,000 lbs.: 10 - 99
years; $100,000
Sale to minor: 2 - 20
years; $10,000
Sale within 1,000 feet of school or 300 feet of youth center, public pool,
video arcade: penalty doubles
Money Laundering:
Spending funds derived from the sale of
more than 50 lbs. is in itself an offense punishable by 5 years - life
or 99 years and a fine of $50,000 - $1,000,000.
Paraphernalia:
Possession:
$500
Sale: 0 - 1 year;
$3,000
Driver’s
license suspended 6 months.
UTAH
Possession:
< 1
oz.: 0 - 6 months;
$1,000
>/= 1 oz.: 0 - 1
year; $2,500
>/= 16 oz.: 0 - 5
years; $5,000
> 100 lbs.: 1 - 15
years; $10,000
Sale:
0 - 5
years; $10,000
Sale within 1,000 feet of school, public park, amusement park, recreation
center, church, synagogue, shopping mall, sports facility, theater, or public
parking lot increases level of offense by one degree.
Possession
or sale with minor present: 5
years MMS
Paraphernalia:
Possession:
6 months; $1,000
Sale: 1 year; $2,500
Sale to minor: 0 - 5
years; $5,000
VERMONT
Possession:
< 2
oz.: 0 - 6 months; $500
>/= 2 oz.: 0 - 3
months; $10,000
>/= 1 lb.: 0 - 5
years; $100,000
>/= 10 lbs.: 0 - 15
years; $500,000
Cultivation:
> 3
plants: 0 - 3 years;
$10,000
> 10 plants: 0 - 5
years; $100,000
> 25 plants: 0 - 15
years; $500,000
Delivery
or sale:
>/=
0.5 oz.: 0 - 5 years;
$100,000
>/= 1 lb.: 0 - 15
years; $500,000
Delivery or sale to minors: Anyone
over 18 who sells to a minor who is at least three years younger:
0 - 5 years; $25,000
Potential additional penalty of up to 10 years for anyone (regardless of age)
selling to a minor. Sale on a
school bus also holds an additional penalty of 0-10 years.
Second
conviction: doubled penalties are possible.
VIRGINIA
(C)
Possession:
</=
5 lb.: 0 - 30 days;
$500. 2nd offense: 0 - 1 year; $2,500
>/= 5 lbs.: 1 - 10
years; $1,000
Cultivation of any amount: 5 - 30
years; $10,000
Delivery or sale:
</=
0.5 oz.: 0 - 1 year;
$2,500
> 0.5 oz.: 1 - 10
years; $2,500
>/= 5 lbs.: 5 - 40
years; $500,000
Sale to minor: 10 - 50
years (1 year MMS); $100,000
Sale within 1,000 feet of school: 1 - 5
years MMS; $2,500 - $100,000
Paraphernalia:
Sale:
1 year; $2,500
Sale to minor: 1 - 5
years; $2,500
Driver’s license suspended 6 months.
WASHINGTON
Possession:
<
40 grams: 1 - 90 days;
$1,000
>/= 40 grams: 0 - 5
years; $10,000
Cultivation or delivery or sale:
Any
amount: 0 - 5 years;
$10,000
Sale to minor: penalty doubles
Within 1,000 feet of a school adds 0 - 2 years
If armed with a deadly weapon: additional
0 - 2 years
Conspiracy to cultivate, deliver, or sell: 0 - 12 months
Paraphernalia possession: 0 - 90
days; $1,000
Driver’s license suspended 90 days for people under 21 years old.
WEST
VIRGINIA (C)
Possession:
<
15 grams: automatic conditional
discharge; $1,000
> 15 grams: 1 - 5
years; $15,000
First-time possession offenders may receive probation without further
penalties.
Cultivation or delivery or sale of any amount:
1 - 15
years; $25,000
Sale to minor: 2 years MMS
Sale within 1,000 feet of school: 2
years MMS
WISCONSIN
(C)
Possession:
Any
amount: 0 - 6 months;
$1,000. 2nd offense doubles
penalty.
Possession near a school, public park, public pool, youth center, community
center, or school bus: >/= 100
hours of community service is mandatory.
Cultivation:
</=
10 plants: 0 - 3 years;
$500 - $2,500
>/= 11 plants: 3 months - 5
years; $1,000 - $5000
> 50 plants: 1 - 10
years; $1,000 - $100,000
Delivery or sale:
</=
500 grams: 0 - 3 years;
$500 - $25,000
> 500 grams: 3 months - 5
years; $1000 - $50,000
>/= 2,500 grams: 1 - 10
years; $1000 - $100,000
Delivery to prisoner: penalty
doubles
Sale to minor if seller is >/= 3 years older: penalty doubles
Sale within 1,000 feet of school, public park, public pool, youth center,
community center, school bus: 1
year MMS
Paraphernalia:
Possession:
0 - 30 days; $500
Delivery or possession with intent to distribute: 0 - 9 months; $10,000
Sale to minor if seller is >/= 3 years older: 0 - 90 days; $1,000
Courts
have discretion to reduce a sentence if reduction is in the community’s best
interest and the public won’t be harmed.
Mandatory doubling of sentences for 2nd and subsequent offenses.
Driver’s license suspended 6 months - 5 years.
WYOMING
(C)
Personal use: </= 3 oz.:
0 - 12 months; $100
Possession of any amount: 0 - 6
months; $750
Cultivation of any amount: 0 - 6
months; $1,000
Sale or delivery:
Of
any amount: 0 - 10
years; $10,000
Sale to minor: penalty doubles
Sale within 500 feet of school: 2
years MMS; $1,000
Drug
Control Funding by Agency FY 2000 - FY 2002
([1])
As quoted in Currie, David P., “The Constitution of the United
States: A Primer for the
People,” Chicago: Univ. of
Chicago Press, 2000, at page 26.
([3])
See: Belenko, Steven R.,
ed., Drugs and Drug Policy in America:
A Documentary History, Westport, Greenwood Press, 2000; McNamara,
Joseph D., “Commentary: Criminalization
of Drug Use,” Vol. XVII(9) Psychiatric Times; Luna, Erik Grant,
“Our Vietnam: The Prohibition Apocalypse” (1997) 46 Depaul L. Rev. 483.
Duke, Stephen B., “Commentary: Drug
Prohibition: An Unnatural Disaster,” (1995) 27 Conn. L. Rev. 571.)
([4])
United States v. Doremus (1919), 249 U.S. Reports 86.
The Harrison Act was again upheld as a revenue measure in United
States v. Nigro (1928), 276 U.S. Reports 332.
([5])
Webb et al. v. United States (1919), 249 U.S. Reports 96.
([6])
United States v. Behrmann (1922), 258 U.S. Reports 280.
([7])
See Luna, supra, note 3, at 490-495.
([8])
Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970,
Title II, 21 U.S.C. sec. 800-966.
([9])
Congress need merely find that a class of activity affects interstate
commerce to enact criminal penalties; no proof is required that the conduct
involved in a single prosecution has an effect on commerce:
see Ehrlich, Susan, “The Increasing Federalization of Crime”
(2000) 32 Ariz. St.L.J.825.
([10])
The Office’s home page can be found at www.whitehousedrugpolicy.gov.
([11])
See, for example, Reinarman, Craig and Harry G. Levine (eds.), Crack
in America: Demon Drugs and
Social Justice. University
of California Press: September 1997. The
organization Human Rights Watch in a May 2000 report on the United States
referred to the phenomenon as a “moral panic” (available on-line at www.hrw.org/reports/2000/usa).
([12])
Department of Justice, Drug Enforcement Agency, “Notice:
Denial of Petition,” April 18, 2001 in Vol. 66, No. 75 of the
Federal Register, pp. 20037-20076.
([13])
Arkansas, California, Colorado, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana,
Louisiana, Michigan, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Utah and the
U.S. Virgin Islands.
([14])
Congress has passed various anti-crime bills that include
drug-related provisions, including the Crime Control Act of 1984 (P.L.
98-473), the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986 (P.L. 99-570), the Anti-Drug Abuse
Act of 1988 (P.L. 100-690), the Crime Control Act of 1990 (P.L. 101-647) and
the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 (P.L. 103-322).
Collectively, these Acts enhanced drug-related penalties and provided
new funding for drug control activities.
([15])
Source: Doyle, Charles,
“Drug Offences: Maximum Fines
and Terms of Imprisonment for Violation of the Federal Controlled Substances
Act and Related Laws,” Library of Congress Congressional Research Service,
November 1, 2000.
([16])
A second offence is one committed after a prior conviction for any
felony drug offence under any federal, state or foreign drug law.
([17])
Distribution of a small amount of marijuana for no remuneration is
treated as simple possession, the penalties for which are contained in the
second chart.
([18])
A prior conviction includes conviction of any offence under
the Controlled Substances Act or any State drug law.
([19])
The Uniform Laws Annotated, Master Edition, Volume 9, Parts II, III
and IV provides annotation materials for the adopting states.
Under the heading “General Statutory Note,” those jurisdictions
that have based their drug legislation on the Uniform Act are stated to have
substantially adopted the major provisions of the Uniform Act but the
official text of the State Act “departs from the official text in a such
manner that the various instances of substitution, omission, and additional
material cannot be clearly indicated by statutory notes.”
As such, it is recommended that recourse be had to the individual
State legislation for specific details of the individual CSAs.
Another useful reference is Leiter, Richard A. (ed.), National
Survey of State Laws, 3rd Ed., Detroit:
Gale Group, 1999, which at pages 152-188 provides charts that set out
specific offences and penalties for cocaine, heroin and marijuana in all
States.
([20])
No. 00-151. Argued March 28, 2001 – Decided May 14, 2001.
Cited as: 532 U.S. __
(2001).
([21])
An “affirmative defence” requires the defendant to prove on a
balance of probabilities that he/she is in compliance with the statute.
([22])
The “choice of evils” defence refers to the defence of medical
necessity. Long recognized in
common law, a defendant is provided the opportunity to prove in court that
his/her violation of the law was necessary to avert a greater evil; the pain
of a debilitating disease or condition in the case of medical marijuana.
Certain states, as noted in the chart, have codified the defence.
([23])
“National Drug Control Strategy:
2001 Annual Report,” Office of National Drug Control Policy, at
page 3.
([24])
“National Drug Control Strategy:
2001 Annual Report,” Office of National Drug Control Policy, at
page 4.
([25])
Available online at: http://www.whitehousedrugpolicy.gov/publications/policy/99ndcs/goals.html.
([26])
Source: Executive Office
of the President of the United States, “Summary:
FY 2002 National Drug Control Budget,” April 2001, at page 11.
([27])
The DEA’s web page is at http://www.usdoj.gov/dea/.
([28])
Source: DEA web site, at
http://www.usdoj.gov/dea/agency/genealogy.htm.
([29])
“New Mexico Governor Calls for Legalizing Drugs,” CNN.com, 6
October 1999, available on-line at www5.cnn.com/US/9910/06/legalizing.drugs.01/.
([30])
Fellner, Jamie, Human Rights Watch Associate Counsel, “United
States: Punishment and Prejudice: Racial Disparities in the War on Drugs,”
Human Rights Watch, May 2000, at paragraph 2 of “Summary and
Recommendations,” available on-line at www.hrw.org/reports/2000/usa/.
([31])
McNamara, Joseph D., “When Cops Become the Gangsters,” Los
Angeles Times, 21 September 1999, available on-line at www.nakedgov.com/mcnamara.htm.
([32])
National Commission on Marihuana and Drug Abuse, “Marihuana:
A Signal of Misunderstanding,” Washington, D.C.:
U.S. Government Printing Office, March, 1972, at page vii.
([33])
Source: Office of
National Drug Control Policy. 2000.
“What America’s Users Spend on Illegal Drugs, 1988-1998.”
([34])
Source: Office of
National Drug Control Policy, Drug Policy Information Clearinghouse, “Drug
Data Summary,” April 1999.
([37])
These figures represent funds specified for the purpose of supporting
the goals and objectives of the National Drug Control Strategy and include
funds budgeted for various departments, including Defense, Education,
Justice, State, and Treasury. Source: “National
Drug Control Budget Executive Summary, Fiscal Year 2002,” Office of
National Drug Control Policy, April 9, 2001.
([38])
Source: “Crime in the
United States: Uniform Crime
Reports,” U.S. Department of Justice, Federal Bureau of Investigation
(1990-2000).
([39])
Sources: Bureau of
Justice Statistics Bulletin, “Prisoners in 1999” (Aug, 2000),
“Prisoners in 1998” (Aug, 1999), “Prisoners in 1997” (Aug, 1998),
“Correctional Populations in the United States,” 1995, 1994, 1993, 1992,
1991, 1990, 1989. “Jails and
Jail Inmates,” 1993-94. “Jail
Inmates,” 1992; 1990. Data
for 1997 percentages of drug offenders are estimated from Bureau of Justice
Statistics Special Report, “Substance Abuse and Treatment, State and
Federal Prisoners, 1997” (January, 1999) and unpublished Bureau of Prisons
Data.
([40])
Source: “Correctional
Populations in the United States, 1997,” Bureau of Justice Statistics,
U.S. Dept. of Justice, (November 2000)
([41])
Source: “U.S.
Compendium of Federal Judicial Statistics, 1999,” (April, 2001).
([42])
Source: Office of
National Drug Control Policy, Drug Policy Information Clearinghouse, “Drug
Data Summary,” April 1999.