| Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year |
| Jennifer J. Carroll, Bayla Ostrach, Taleed El-Sabawi |
HEALTH INEQUITIES AMONG PEOPLE WHO USE DRUGS IN A POST-DOBBS AMERICA: THE CASE FOR A SYNDEMIC ANALYSIS |
51 Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 549 (Fall, 2023) |
Keywords: Pregnancy, Substance Use, Overdose, Syndemics, Abortion Abstract: Punitive policy responses to substance use and to abortion care constitute direct attacks on personal liberty and bodily autonomy. In this article, we leverage the concept of syndemics to anticipate how the already synergistic stigmas against people who use drugs and... |
2023 |
| U.S. Attorney General |
MEMORANDUM TO ALL FEDERAL PROSECUTORS, ADDITIONAL DEPARTMENT POLICIES REGARDING CHARGING, PLEAS, AND SENTENCING IN DRUG CASES |
2023 Federal Sentencing Reporter 2613201 (2/1/2023) |
December 16, 2022 General Department policies regarding charging an offense, entering into a plea agreement, and making sentencing recommendations are set forth in General Department Policies Regarding Charging, Pleas, and Sentencing (2022) (hereinafter General Policies Memorandum). This memorandum provides additional, specific policies regarding... |
2023 |
| George F. K. Werner |
NORM COMMANDEERING AND THE TOBACCO TRUST |
73 Duke Law Journal 157 (October, 2023) |
In the early 1870s, Durham became a major center of tobacco marketing. Farmers brought their crops to auction warehouses, which then sold them to the town's manufacturers. This was a process facilitated by a well-developed system of social norms. But the formation of the American Tobacco Company's tobacco trust in the 1890s threatened that... |
2023 |
| Steven W. Bender |
RACIAL JUSTICE AND MARIJUANA |
59 California Western Law Review 223 (Spring, 2023) |
Current legalization approaches for recreational marijuana fall short of performing and delivering racial justice as measured by materiality and outcomes rather than promises of formal legal equality. As a small first step for unwinding the War on Drugs, this Article considers how legalizing recreational marijuana can help move law and society... |
2023 |
| Annie Jordan |
SEX, DRUGS, AND BALLOT MEASURES: AN ARGUMENT FOR MASSACHUSETTS TO FULLY DECRIMINALIZE PROSTITUTION |
56 Suffolk University Law Review 145 (2023) |
Say that one of those women was a sex worker, then is that person meant to be shamed in their death? Would they have deserved it? The answer is no. On March 16, 2021, an armed shooter killed eight people at two massage businesses associated with prostitution. The shooter told law enforcement the victims were temptations to eliminate. These... |
2023 |
| Melanie McPhail , Tania Bubela , Faculty of Health Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby V5A 1S6, Canada |
SHOULD CANADA ADOPT MANAGED ACCESS AGREEMENTS IN CANADA FOR EXPENSIVE DRUGS? |
10 Journal of Law & the Biosciences 1 (January-June, 2023) |
Drugs are increasingly authorized based on less mature evidence, leaving payors faced with significant clinical and cost-effectiveness uncertainties. As a result, payors must often choose between reimbursing a drug that may not turn out to be cost-effective (or may even be unsafe) or delaying the reimbursement of a drug that is cost-effective and... |
2023 |
| Justin Danziger |
THE DRUG POLICY REFORM ACT: ANALYZING THE POTENTIAL FUTURE OF UNITED STATES FEDERAL DRUG POLICY |
29 Cardozo Journal of Equal Rights & Social Justice 819 (Summer, 2023) |
C1-2Table of Contents INTRODUCTION. 819 I. BACKGROUND ON THE WAR ON DRUGS. 821 A. Introducing the Drug Policy Reform Act and Laying the Groundwork. 824 II. AN ANALYSIS OF THE DRUG POLICY REFORM ACT. 826 III. THE PROBLEM. 828 A. Addressing the Issue with the United States' Drug Policy. 828 B. The War on Drugs Masked as the War on Minority... |
2023 |
| Kathryn M. Capizzi |
THE HAZY EMPLOYMENT PROTECTIONS FOR MEDICAL MARIJUANA USERS IN THE PENNSYLVANIA MEDICAL MARIJUANA ACT |
26 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change 425 (2023) |
INTRODUCTION. 426 I. ROLLING IT OUT: CONTEMPORARY FEDERAL AND STATE LEGISLATION OF MEDICAL MARIJUANA. 428 A. Federal Legislative History Regulating Marijuana Use. 429 1. The Controlled Substances Act (CSA). 429 2. Food, Drug, and Cosmetics Act (FDCA). 431 3. Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). 431 4. Supreme Court Precedent: Gonzales v.... |
2023 |
| Jay-Donavin Ved |
THE INFLATION REDUCTION ACT OF 2022: ADDRESSING PRESCRIPTION DRUG COVERAGE |
32 Annals of Health Law Advance Directive 131 (Spring, 2023) |
High prescription drug prices disproportionately impact low-income individuals, uninsured individuals, and people of color. Importantly, the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 includes several provisions pertaining to lowering prescription drug costs for Medicare recipients and reducing drug spending by the federal government. In particular, this Act... |
2023 |
| Marisa Chamberland |
THE JUDICIAL WAR ON DRUGS: DECIDING WHETHER TO APPLY THE FEDERAL OR STATE DEFINITION OF CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE OFFENSES FOR CAREER OFFENDER SENTENCING ENHANCEMENTS |
28 Suffolk Journal of Trial and Appellate Advocacy 169 (2022-2023) |
[T]he individual convicted for an offence or crime considered morally wrong is convicted based on a series of hypotheses and probabilities and not necessarily because he or she is actually morally wrong. Today, drug-related offenses make up the majority of felony offenses in the United States. Approximately half of the incarcerated population in... |
2023 |
| Kathy Rong Zhou |
THE LAST BLACK TOBACCO UNION: LOCAL 208, SEGREGATED SENIORITY, AND THE INTEGRATING SOUTH |
73 Duke Law Journal 209 (October, 2023) |
After federal reforms in the 1930s protected the right to organize, the Tobacco Workers International Union made quick work of mobilizing the American South. Its unions, though segregated, made strides. Yet Black unions' collective bargaining gains could not transcend one of the South's most oppressive employment practices: segregated systems for... |
2023 |
| Alexandra Lyons |
THE MARITIME DRUG LAW ENFORCEMENT ACT (MDLEA): ONE OF THE DEADLIEST WEAPONS IN AMERICA'S ARSENAL IN THE ONGOING WAR ON DRUGS |
47 Tulane Maritime Law Journal 133 (Winter, 2023) |
I. Introduction. 134 II. Jurisdiction Under International Law. 137 A. Criminal Jurisdiction Under International Law. 137 B. Law of the Flag. 138 III. Expanding Jurisdiction on the High Seas. 140 A. The Enactment of the Maritime Drug Law Enforcement Act. 140 B. The Enforcement of the Maritime Drug Law Enforcement Act. 144 1. Lengthy Detention and... |
2023 |
| Lahny Silva |
THE TRAP CHRONICLES, VOL. 2: A CALL TO RECONSIDER "RISK" IN FEDERAL SUPERVISED RELEASE |
82 Maryland Law Review 530 (2023) |
Introduction. 531 I. History - Life can only be understood backwards; but it must be lived forwards.. 536 A. The Start. 536 1. Passage of the Probation Act of 1925. 539 2. Development of the Federal Probation System. 541 B. The 1960s & 1970s. 544 1. Questioning the Effectiveness of Supervision. 545 2. The Court Weighs In. 547 C. The War. 549 1.... |
2023 |
| Tess A. Chaffee |
WE[ED] THE PEOPLE: HOW A BROADER INTERPRETATION OF THE ROHRABACHER-FARR AMENDMENT EFFECTUATES THE CHANGING SOCIAL POLICY SURROUNDING MEDICAL MARIJUANA |
91 University of Cincinnati Law Review 856 (2023) |
Over the past hundred years, the status of marijuana has shifted from legal to illegal and back again. Although marijuana remains federally illegal under the Controlled Substances Act of 1970, as of 2022, seventy-four percent of states have measures in place allowing medical marijuana use, and an additional twenty percent of states allow for low... |
2023 |
| George A. Couture , Washington, D.C. |
What Version of the Federal Controlled Substances Act Schedules Does ACCA's "Serious Drug Offense" Definition Incorporate? |
51 No. 3 Preview of United States Supreme Court Cases 3 (11/27/2023) |
Petitioners Justin Brown and Eugene Jackson each pleaded guilty in separate proceedings to possessing a firearm following a felony conviction under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g). Brown plead in the Middle District of Pennsylvania, Jackson in the Southern District of Florida. Both were sentenced under the Armed Career Criminal Act (ACCA), which imposes a... |
2023 |
| Ashley Mastro |
A MODEL PATH FOR DECRIMINALIZING SIMPLE POSSESSION OF ALL DRUGS |
71 DePaul Law Review 875 (Summer, 2022) |
Every twenty-five seconds, someone in the United States is arrested for possessing a personal use amount of drugs. This comes at a great cost to the United States, approximating $47 billion annually. Criminalizing drugs creates a significant burden on the criminal justice system in terms of manpower, finances, and over-incarceration. The criminal... |
2022 |
| Sarah Thompson Schick, Kirsten Axelsen |
CONSIDERING MODIFICATIONS TO EXISTING FDA REGULATORY INCENTIVES TO ACHIEVE GREATER RACIAL AND ETHNIC DIVERSITY IN PIVOTAL CLINICAL TRIALS FOR DRUG APPROVALS |
77 Food & Drug Law Journal 246 (2022) |
When clinical trials for new drug approvals fail to adequately represent racial and ethnic groups, there is a lost opportunity to collect data on people who will be prescribed these medications. In this Paper, we consider data published by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration reflecting the current state of diversity in pivotal clinical trials,... |
2022 |
| Jaden W.R. Jackson |
CONTROVERSIAL CANNABIS: HOW PASSAGE OF THE M.O.R.E. ACT CAN REMEDY THE DISPARATE IMPACT OF MARIJUANA PROHIBITION |
46 Seton Hall Legislative Journal 705 (2022) |
Since 1996, states have seen a surge in marijuana legislation. As of February 2022, eighteen states and the District of Columbia have legalized adult recreational marijuana use, while thirty-six states and the District of Columbia have legalized medical marijuana. Although marijuana is a Schedule I drug under the Controlled Substance Act (CSA),... |
2022 |
| Kalyn Heyen |
DRUG COURT DISCRIMINATION: DISCRETIONARY ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA IMPEDES THE LEGISLATIVE GOAL TO PROVIDE EQUAL AND EFFECTIVE ACCESS TO TREATMENT ASSISTANCE |
43 Cardozo Law Review 2509 (August, 2022) |
C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 2510 I. Background. 2513 A. The United States's Initial Approach to Substance Use Disorder. 2513 B. The Utilization of United States Drug Courts in Response. 2515 1. The Functioning of United States Drug Courts. 2515 2. An Illustration of the Drug Court Process. 2517 3. Eligibility Criteria. 2519 C. The Reality... |
2022 |
| Michael R. Ulrich |
E-RACING TOBACCO & NICOTINE-RELATED HEALTH DISPARITIES |
77 Food & Drug Law Journal 219 (2022) |
In the past, tobacco companies used targeted advertising to integrate menthol cigarettes and addict the Black community, generating tobacco-related health disparities. As Juul has come under attack, they have utilized the tobacco playbook to protect itself and deflect criticism by donating to a historically Black medical school and recruiting... |
2022 |
| Michele I. Naples |
ESTIMATING THE SAVINGS FROM DECRIMINALIZING DRUG CONSUMPTION: THE CASE OF NEW JERSEY |
19 Rutgers Journal of Law & Public Policy 353 (Spring, 2022) |
Decriminalizing drugs means ending the Drug War against users, and permits reallocating its resources to public health and community restoration. While Oregon recently passed decriminalization, New Jersey has taken a piecemeal approach for twenty-five years. This study assesses that history, the shape of the prison-industrial complex born of the... |
2022 |
| Daniel A. Kracov |
EUGENICS AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF U.S. FOOD AND DRUG LAW |
77 Food & Drug Law Journal 135 (2022) |
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and its core statutory authorities have a complex and storied history. Historians and lawyers recounting the agency's early development--which roughly spanned from the debates culminating in the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906 to the enactment of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act of 1938--typically cite... |
2022 |
| Douglas A. Berman , Alex Fraga |
HOW STATE REFORMS HAVE MELLOWED FEDERAL ENFORCEMENT OF MARIJUANA PROHIBITION |
49 Fordham Urban Law Journal 675 (March, 2022) |
Introduction. 675 I. A Short History of Intersecting Federal and State Marijuana Prohibitions and Reforms. 677 II. Modern Federal Marijuana Enforcement and Sentencing. 683 A. The Decline in Federal Marijuana Sentences. 685 B. The Impact and Import of Many Fewer Federal Marijuana Sentences. 686 C. Changes in Rates of Convictions. 687 D. Changes in... |
2022 |
| Scott Bloomberg , Robert A. Mikos |
LEGALIZATION WITHOUT DISRUPTION: WHY CONGRESS SHOULD LET STATES RESTRICT INTERSTATE COMMERCE IN MARIJUANA |
49 Pepperdine Law Review 839 (2022) |
Over the past twenty-five years, states have developed elaborate regulatory systems to govern lawful marijuana markets. In designing these systems, states have assumed that the Dormant Commerce Clause (DCC) does not apply; Congress, after all, has banned all commerce in marijuana. However, the states' reprieve from the doctrine may soon come to an... |
2022 |
| Julie M. Whitson |
MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION: CHILD-CENTERED CONSIDERATIONS IN TEXAS FAMILY LAW MATTERS |
53 Saint Mary's Law Journal 883 (2022) |
I. Introduction. 885 II. Background of Marijuana & History of the Law in the U.S. and Texas. 886 III. Overview of Child Custody Considerations in Texas. 890 IV. What is Currently Legal in Texas. 892 A. CBD Products May Play a Role in Texas Family Law Cases. 898 V. Future Legalization in Texas. 903 A. A Child-Centered View of Texas's Proposed... |
2022 |
| David Angelatos |
MISINFORMATION ABOUT MARIJUANA: COMMERCIALIZATION, CONSOLIDATION, AND THE NEW FIRST AMENDMENT |
71 American University Law Review 2157 (August, 2022) |
From Reefer Madness to This Is Your Brain on Drugs, Americans have lived through decades of anti-cannabis propaganda. Legalization is poised to turn this information environment on its head, unleashing a torrent of corporate-funded, pro-cannabis misinformation that regulators cannot prevent or dispel. This appears to be a problem caused by the... |
2022 |
| Jennifer Lee Barrow |
RECIDIVISM REFORMATION: ELIMINATING DRUG PREDICATES |
135 Harvard Law Review Forum 418 (20-May-22) |
The Armed Career Criminal Act (ACCA) imposes a minimum fifteen-year sentence for violating 18 U.S.C. § 922(g) after three violent felony or serious drug offense convictions. The ACCA disproportionately impacts people of color and imposes significant costs on the federal judiciary and the criminal justice system overall. This Essay contributes... |
2022 |
| Tessa Ptucha |
RE-DIRECTING THE 50-YEAR-LONG WAR ON DRUGS IN THE UNITED STATES: SAFE INJECTION SITES AS THE NECESSARY WEAPONS |
50 Hofstra Law Review 929 (Summer, 2022) |
Just north of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, locals from the town of Kensington watched their quaint community transform into the epicenter of the opioid crisis in less than forty years. Since 2007, more people report using the non-prescription opioid, heroin, each year in the United States--with an all-time high of 948,000 (reported) opioid users... |
2022 |
| André Douglas Pond Cummings , Steven A. Ramirez |
ROADMAP FOR ANTI-RACISM: FIRST UNWIND THE WAR ON DRUGS NOW |
96 Tulane Law Review 469 (February, 2022) |
I. Introduction. 469 II. A Short History of the War on Drugs and Mass Incarceration. 475 III. The Devastation Suffered in Communities of Color. 486 A. Direct Economic Costs of the War on Drugs and Mass Incarceration. 487 B. Government Expenditures. 488 C. Economic and Psychological Costs on Families of Color. 490 D. Indirect Costs of the War on... |
2022 |
| Evelyn L.A. Jackson |
SAFE INJECTION FACILITIES: RECONSIDERING AMERICAN DRUG POLICY |
63 Boston College Law Review 1467 (April, 2022) |
Abstract: On January 12, 2021, in United States v. Safehouse, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit held that supervised injection facilities-- sites where medical professionals monitor injection drug use--violate the Crack House Statute. The legality of supervised injection facilities was a matter of first impression at the circuit... |
2022 |
| Sarah Brady Siff |
TARGETED MARIJUANA LAW ENFORCEMENT IN LOS ANGELES, 1914-1959 |
49 Fordham Urban Law Journal 643 (March, 2022) |
Introduction. 643 I. Anti-Mexican Aims of the First Marijuana Ban. 644 II. Marijuana Was a Whole Different Thing Back Then. 648 III. From Bad to Worse: Racialized Enforcement and New Policing Strategies. 654 IV. Cultural Conquest: Targeting the Hip and Famous. 658 V. Escalation of Unconstitutional Enforcement. 667 Conclusion: Confronting the Legacy... |
2022 |
| André Douglas Pond Cummings , Steven A. Ramirez |
THE ILLINOIS CANNABIS SOCIAL-EQUITY PROGRAM: TOWARD A SOCIALLY JUST PEACE IN THE WAR ON DRUGS? |
53 Loyola University Chicago Law Journal 793 (Summer, 2022) |
Laudably, when Illinois legalized the recreational use of cannabis, it also sought to repair the damage wrought by the War on Drugs (WOD) through its social-equity initiatives. That harm included excessive and disproportionate incarceration in communities of color, over-policing within those communities, and all of the social and economic harms... |
2022 |
| Lauren Williams , Samuel D. Hodge, Jr. |
THE IMPLICATIONS OF LEGALIZED MARIJUANA ON ESTABLISHING PROBABLE CAUSE FOR A WARRANTLESS SEARCH |
66 Saint Louis University Law Journal 267 (Winter, 2022) |
The amount of money and legal energy being given to prosecute hundreds of thousands of Americans who are caught with a few ounces of marijuana in their jeans simply makes no sense - the kindest way to put it. A sterner way to put it is that it is an outrage, an imposition on basic civil liberties and on the reasonable expenditure of social... |
2022 |
| Taleed El-Sabawi, Jennifer Oliva |
THE INFLUENCE OF WHITE EXCEPTIONALISM ON DRUG WAR DISCOURSE |
94 Temple Law Review 649 (Summer, 2022) |
For much of its history, the United States has adopted a punitive approach to escalating overdose rates and addiction through the prohibition or stringent regulation of drugs deemed dangerous or habit forming. The policy tools used to support this approach rely on criminal punishment for the possession and sale of such substances and are based on... |
2022 |
| André Douglas Pond Cummings, Steven A. Ramirez |
THE RACIST ROOTS OF THE WAR ON DRUGS & THE MYTH OF EQUAL PROTECTION FOR PEOPLE OF COLOR |
44 University of Arkansas at Little Rock Law Review 453 (Spring, 2022) |
By 2021, the costs and pain arising from the propagation of the American racial hierarchy reached such heights that calls for anti-racism and criminal justice reform dramatically expanded. The brutal murder of George Floyd by the Minneapolis police vividly proved that the social construction of race in America directly conflicted with supposed... |
2022 |
| Alessandro Clark-Ansani |
THE UNCONSTITUTIONAL RACIAL ANIMUS BEHIND FEDERAL MARIJUANA CRIMINALIZATION |
7/29/2022 University of Chicago Law Review Online 1 (29-Jul-22) |
In August 2021, the Honorable Miranda M. Du, Chief Judge for the district court of the District of Nevada, struck down 8 U.S.C § 1326, the federal criminal statute that addresses illegal reentry into the United States. That groundbreaking decision, United States v. Carrillo-Lopez (D. Nev. 2021), relied on the test established in Village of... |
2022 |
| Thomas Salazar |
TRIP OR TREAT: PSYCHEDELIC DRUG REFORM IN CALIFORNIA |
53 University of the Pacific Law Review 321 (January, 2022) |
Heath and Safety Code §§ 11350.1, 11377.1 (new), §§ 11054, 11150.2, 11350, 11364, 11364.7, 11365, 11377, 11379, 11382, 11550 (amended), § 131065 (new), § 11999 (repealed), Article 7 (commencing with § 11390) of Chapter 6 of Division 10 (repealed). SB 519 (Wiener); In Committee Process. C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 321 II. Legal... |
2022 |
| Alexis S. Hughes |
UNEQUAL JUSTICE: WHY FEDERAL COURTS SHOULD ADOPT THE INDIVIDUALIZED APPROACH TO SENTENCING DEFENDANTS CONVICTED OF DRUG CONSPIRACY |
72 American University Law Review Forum 19 (October, 2022) |
For several decades, the Federal Circuit Courts have been split about how to sentence defendants convicted of drug conspiracy under 21 U.S.C. §§ 846 and 841. While some circuits hold defendants strictly liable for all the drugs dealt by all members of the conspiracy, other circuits take a fundamentally different approach: they hold individuals... |
2022 |
| Mark Osler |
WHAT WE GOT WRONG IN THE WAR ON DRUGS |
17 University of Saint Thomas Law Journal 968 (Spring, 2022) |
On Friday morning of each week for two years, my phone would ring and each time I would hesitate to answer. The caller was a man named Ronald Blount, an inmate at the federal prison in Beaumont, Texas. I was his lawyer, working on his petition for clemency. I hesitated to answer, because week after week I had no good news to share. Mr. Blount was... |
2022 |
| Ryan C. Griffith, Esq. |
A BREATH OF FRESH AIR: A CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT LEGALIZING MARIJUANA THROUGH AN ARTICLE V CONVENTION OF THE STATES |
16 University of Massachusetts Law Review 275 (Spring, 2021) |
Criminal enforcement of anti-marijuana laws by the United States federal government has been non-sensical for more than twenty years. Culminating, ultimately, in an anomaly within American jurisprudence when California legalized marijuana in 1996 in direct violation of federal law, yet the federal government did little to stop it. Since then, a... |
2021 |
| Sarah Brady Siff, Visiting Assistant Professor, Drug Enforcement & Policy Center, Moritz College of Law, The Ohio State University |
A HISTORY OF EARLY DRUG SENTENCES IN CALIFORNIA: RACISM, RIGHTISM, REPEAT |
Federal Sentencing Reporter (October 1, 2021) |
For the past hundred years, harsh drug sentences have had extraordinary support from the public. Historically, enthusiasm for drug prohibition often coincides with affinities for summary justice and authoritarian social control. Escalations of drug sentences in California from 1881 to 1961 followed a pattern of collective myth making and value... |
2021 |
| Madison Standon |
APPLYING THE "WAR ON TERROR" TO THE "WAR ON DRUGS:" THE LEGAL IMPLICATIONS AND BENEFITS OF RECATEGORIZING LATIN AMERICAN DRUG CARTELS AS FOREIGN TERRORIST ORGANIZATIONS |
22 San Diego International Law Journal 365 (Spring, 2021) |
C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 366 A. A Brief History About the War on Drugs. 368 B. The Current International War on Drugs is Ineffective. 370 C. A Brief History About the War on Terror. 372 II. Applicable Law. 375 A. Domestic Laws. 375 1. Terrorism Laws. 375 a. Statutory Law. 375 b. Case Law. 377 2. Drug Laws. 379 B. International Laws.... |
2021 |
| Maximilian Plail |
BANK ACCESS FOR MARIJUANA COMPANIES (BANNED AT FEDERAL LEVEL EVEN THOUGH MARIJUANA IS INCREASINGLY LEGAL AT U.S. STATE LEVEL) |
4 Wayne State University Journal of Business Law 132 (2021) |
Currently, no field of law is giving rise to as many issues as marijuana legislation, with its conflict between the increasing legalization of marijuana by U.S. states, on the one hand, and the strict prohibition of marijuana-related activities under federal law, on the other. Despite the need for change, there is no comparable study that explores... |
2021 |
| Julie Andersen Hill |
CANNABIS BANKING: WHAT MARIJUANA CAN LEARN FROM HEMP |
101 Boston University Law Review 1043 (May, 2021) |
Marijuana-related businesses have banking problems. Many banks explain that, because marijuana is illegal under federal law, they will not serve the industry. Even when marijuana-related businesses can open bank accounts, they still have trouble accepting credit cards and getting loans. Some hope to fix marijuana's banking problems with changes to... |
2021 |
| Katie Jaggers |
CORRECTING INJUSTICES: EXPUNGING PRIOR MARIJUANA CONVICTIONS IS KENTUCKY'S NEXT BEST STEP TOWARDS RESTORATIVE JUSTICE |
48 Northern Kentucky Law Review 385 (2021) |
Imagine a society that allows one person to openly and legally possess a substance while another person serves a prison sentence after being convicted of the crime of having that same substance. This society exists today in Kentucky, and the unfairness this causes could become even starker going forward. As public opinion towards marijuana use... |
2021 |
| Miki Saito |
DECRIMINALIZE DRUGS NOW: A DIRE SITUATION BECOMES MUCH MORE URGENT |
20 Seattle Journal for Social Justice 357 (Fall, 2021) |
The COVID-19 pandemic has unquestionably impacted many communities. It has revealed inadequacies in social protection systems that purport to support vulnerable individuals, such as those experiencing homelessness and poverty, those living with disabilities, and those experiencing drug addiction. Although drug overdose deaths decreased from 2017 to... |
2021 |
| Leslie E. Scott |
DRUG DECRIMINALIZATION, ADDICTION, AND MASS INCARCERATION: A THEORIES OF PUNISHMENT FRAMEWORK FOR ENDING THE "WAR ON DRUGS" |
48 Northern Kentucky Law Review 267 (2021) |
The United States is home to less than five percent of the world's population, but nearly a quarter of its incarcerated population, with more than 2.1 million people incarcerated in state and federal prisons and local jails in 2019, a number that dropped to 1.8 million by mid-2020 due largely to the Covid-19 pandemic and pressure from advocates to... |
2021 |
| Alexander Clementi |
HIGH TIME FOR A CHANGE: HOW THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SIGNATORY COUNTRIES AND THE UNITED NATIONS CONVENTIONS GOVERNING NARCOTIC DRUGS MUST ADAPT TO FOSTER A GLOBAL SHIFT IN CANNABIS LAW |
46 Brooklyn Journal of International Law 603 (2021) |
Twenty-six-year-old DeMarcus Sanders of Waterloo, Iowa was pulled over by a police officer for playing his radio too loudly. What should have been a routine traffic stop turned into a life-altering arrest when the police officer searched Sanders' car and found marijuana. After pleading guilty, Sanders was sentenced to thirty days in jail, during... |
2021 |
| Alexandra J. Messmore |
INCARCERATION RATES AND THE EVOLUTION OF ANTI-DRUG POLICY IN THE UNITED STATES: IS INCARCERATION THE ANSWER? |
44 American Journal of Trial Advocacy 457 (Spring, 2021) |
The United States leads the world in many things, including incarceration rates. Combining the number of persons incarcerated in state and federal prisons, 419 out of every 100,000 United States residents were incarcerated at the end of 2019. How did the United States, a country that prides itself on freedom, become the world's incarceration... |
2021 |
| Alessandra Dumenigo |
LET'S MAKE SOME "SCENTS" OF OUR FOURTH AMENDMENT RIGHTS: THE DISCRIMINATORY TRUTHS BEHIND USING THE MERE SMELL OF BURNT MARIJUANA AS PROBABLE CAUSE TO SEARCH A VEHICLE |
33 Saint Thomas Law Review 283 (Spring, 2021) |
On March 13, 2018, Jason Serrano, who was recovering from abdominal surgery at the time, was riding in the passenger seat of his friend's car when they were pulled over by New York Police Department Officer Kyle Erickson for a broken taillight. Officer Erickson approached the car and claimed that he smelled marijuana emanating from the vehicle.... |
2021 |