Brittney Griner's 9-Year Sentence Highlights Stark Differences Between Russian and U.S. Pot Penalties
Travelers caught with small amounts of marijuana at the U.S. border face much less severe punishment.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov plan to negotiate the possible release of WNBA player Brittney Griner, who yesterday was sentenced to nine years in a Russian penal colony for traveling with cannabis products. That jaw-dropping punishment highlights stark differences between the United States and Russia in the treatment of minor marijuana offenses.
In February, Griner was caught with cannabis vape cartridges in her luggage at an airport near Moscow. The Phoenix Mercury star said she uses marijuana for medical purposes, as permitted by Arizona law (which also allows recreational use), and inadvertently packed the cartridges when she left for Russia, where she planned to play with the Russian Premier League during the WNBA offseason.
In Russia, possessing less than seven grams of marijuana (about a quarter of an ounce) is an administrative offense punishable by fines. Possessing seven grams or more triggers criminal penalties, which can include up to two years of "corrective labor." But because Griner brought marijuana into Russia, she was charged with smuggling a "significant amount" of "narcotic drugs or psychotropic substances," which carries a sentence of five to 10 years.
How would a traveler entering the United States be treated in similar circumstances? For small amounts of marijuana similar to what Griner possessed, U.S. Customs and Border Protection warns that travelers could face "federal civil penalties of up to $1,000." It adds that "CBP officers may also turn the case over to state and local departments for prosecution," in which case the penalties would depend on the law in the destination state.
Marijuana possession penalties vary widely from state to state. In the 19 states that have legalized recreational use, there are no civil or criminal penalties for possession up to a specified ceiling, typically an ounce but more in some places. A traveler arriving in New York with up to three ounces of marijuana or up to 24 grams of concentrates, for example, would face no state penalties in addition to the possible federal fine.
In Texas, where I live, possessing two ounces or less of marijuana is a misdemeanor punishable by up to six months in jail and/or a $2,000 fine. But possession of concentrates (which Griner had) is treated more severely: Even possession of less than a gram is a felony punishable by up to two years in prison and/or a $10,000 fine.
Across the border in Oklahoma (where marijuana is legal only for medical use), simple possession is a misdemeanor punishable by up to a year in jail and/or a $1,000 fine. The same penalties apply to concentrates. Arkansas, Florida, Idaho, South Dakota, Tennessee, and Wyoming have similar penalties, although sentences typically fall short of the maximum.
In other states, such as Delaware, Maryland, and New Hampshire, possession of small amounts is a civil offense punishable by a modest fine. Some states, such as Louisiana, Mississippi, and North Dakota, treat low-level marijuana possession as a criminal offense but preclude jail. Like Texas, they may punish possession of concentrates more severely. In Mississippi, for example, possessing as little as a tenth of a gram or less can be charged as a misdemeanor or a felony, punishable by up to a year in jail and/or a $1,000 fine.
Such penalties are severe compared to none at all, of course, and even a misdemeanor conviction can carry ancillary penalties more consequential than the sentence itself. Furthermore, growing or distributing marijuana can still result in long prison terms, including life sentences, under state or federal law—an injustice that is especially striking now that 37 states have legalized marijuana for medical or recreational use. But compared to the situation prior to the 1970s, when states routinely treated marijuana possession as a felony, the current regime seems mild, and it certainly looks enlightened compared to Russia's approach.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Obviously the United States government must do everything in its power, including releasing any and all Russian arms dealers currently in custody, to secure the release of this brave LGBTQIA+ Black Kween who is willing to stand up against America as a racist police state.
Something tells me that after a few months in Russian prison this individual will be a little less interested in shit talking the United States. Not saying she does do those things, I have no clue who she is, but being imprisoned in a place that actually is all the things the far left believes the U.S. to be is usually eye opening.
I think the reverse; she will blame fascists and neo-nazis for preventing the government from trading for her sooner.
That old saying about a conservative is a liberal who's been mugged doesn't apply to the entitled woke. They just double down.
she has a history of domestic violence with her previous girlfriend. She has some deep seated psych issues. A Russian prison will either push her to inner reform or not
....
Brittney Griner pleads guilty in domestic violence case, enters counseling
https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/2015/04/28/brittney-griner-plea-deal-guilty-domestic-violence-glory-johnson-wnba/26538559/
"Griner, 24, and Johnson engaged in an argument that led to minor injuries in their Goodyear, Ariz., home. Both women were seen "throwing things at each other, and several people inside the home tried to break up the fight" before authorities were called, the police report noted."
Fun fact, of all types of domestic relationships, lesbian relationships are the most prone to violence, more than straight couples and more than male male couples.
I can’t fathom as to why that may be true.
I am a student and I do work part time on this website to meet my needs. One who is jobless or want to earn more money for himself, (buc-58) should must try this because this is really very easy and less time consuming and also advantageous without investing any amount.
.
SEE MORE:>>>> https://workofferweb24.pages.dev/
They are bullied as children.
I figure it might take about a year to cook the victimization mentality out of her. Being sent to a penal colony instead of a prison certainly has a sort of Star Trek aura about it though, so maybe they have some sort of high tech treatment devices that could speed up the process some. If she comes back saying she's so hungry she wants to "find a kitchen to raid" lookout.
lol - no, she will shit talk within weeks in not days in the US and try to portray her plight in Russia as similar to what people like her experience everyday in the US.
people like her are not redeemable because she had more than enough wealth from her playing sports to ignore and repercussions from her statements and actions on US soil. At most she might lose her job but even that is suspect because the team would not want the negative publicity
In a foreign country they have nothing like she is learning.
Has she said anything publicly or are you just laying on your own bigoted narrative?
How exactly do you know she is "far left"?
I wonder if your sarcasm fell on deaf ears. So many, who hasn’t done anything for their country, are quick to bash America. Fellow blacks have benefited greatly from the sacrifices of blacks AND Whites, who fought to make America still the best country for freedom lovers. Yet the privileged, such as Lebron James, Brittany Griner, and other , continue to bash our country. This is because they no nothing of history or sacrifice. This has to stop or we will fail as a country. Read a history book black people. It will make you more appreciative of our great country. And stop focusing things you can’t change. Focus on making America a family of different races and ethnicity while living as one.
Travelers caught with small amounts of marijuana at the U.S. border face much less severe punishment.
Well, that's quite the departure from the usual descriptions of medieval hell Americans are subjected to for nonviolent offenses such as killing someone with a bag of weed in their pocket.
A bit dishonest though as hash oil, what she had, is still a felony up to 10 years in some states.
https://www.juliannasosa.com/post/is-it-a-felony-to-possess-a-thc-oil-vape-pen-short-answer-yes
That elevates it to a "manufactured" controlled substance, which makes it double-plus ungood.
Wait, I thought she had CBD oil... why does the story keep changing?
https://sports.yahoo.com/hashish-oil-did-land-brittney-114041136.html
"Wait, I thought she had CBD oil"
Me too. Wow, she's a bigger fucking idiot than I thought.
It is also not legal under the Arizona Marijuana act.
https://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/news/cannabis-extracts-arizona-dispensaries-illegal-appeals-court-rules-10558752
So she's comparing two different things. Don't know if intentional or through ignorance.
Also apparently different for federal laws
Hashish (small amount)
10 kg or less
First Offense: Not more than 5 years
Second Offense: Not more than 10 ears. Fine $500,000 if an individual, $2 million if other than an individual.
https://www.fordham.edu/student-life/deans-of-students-and-student-life/student-handbook/university-regulations/drug-free-campus-guidelines/federal-trafficking-penalties-for-marijuana-hashish-and-hashish-oil-schedule-i-substances/
Really? 10kg?
I'm impressed.
In February, Griner was caught with cannabis vape cartridges in her luggage at an airport near Moscow.
In Griner's defense, maybe she thought she was flying to Moscow, ID.
Moscow, ID will also throw you in the can for cannabis.
I just read about the Moscow, Idaho cops busting a Spokane woman for coming to visit her husband at the jailhouse. He was serving almost a year in jail for something stronger than 0.5% beer. They arrested her under the same law. See: The Spokesman-Review, 04JUL1929 on Google News Archives, p.9
Way better than Singapore.
https://www.insider.com/singapore-man-given-death-penalty-2-pounds-cannabis-2021-10
"It could be worse!" is little consolation for people caught in the legal meatgrinder.
It could be worse. She could be living in the US under Jim Crowe where the police are genociding her people.
Forced to stand and listen to the national anthem, while being paid. Literal chattel slavery by definition, that. I don't agree w/ BYODB, I think it will badmouth the US the moment it is back and comfortable.
When the American ambassador obtains her release and brings her back to the embassy I hope she remembers to spit at the flag and take a knee.
Taking a knee during so many national anthems is what caused severe knee pain, for which she used medical marijuana, which caused her arrest and conviction in Russia.
Or so I like to think.
Then again, when's the last time she voted libertarian, or donated to her local LP? Lots of people are absolutely for the initiation of force, as long as it is in a third-person conjugation.
Oh, come on. Griner got that sentence because she has name recognition and is worth something in a swap for someone the Russians want freed.
^ Exactly this.
And we know this because it's exactly what is happening.
It is a severe unjust penalty. Pretty much every country including the United States has people rotting in prison serving unjust sentences. Is the sentence so unjust as to shock the conscience? Not really.
It would be nice if Russia would send her back to the US. It would end a grave injustice. That being said, however, I think it would be an enormous mistake for the United States to trade some Russian criminal's release for Griner's release. Doing that would tell the Russians that the way to get important people jailed in the United States out of jail is to just nab some American, give them a long prison sentence, and then force us to trade said American for said Russian. I don't think that would work out well for the United States or any of its citizens who for whatever reason travel to Russia.
Russians that the way to get important people jailed in the United States out of jail is to just nab some American, give them a long prison sentence, and then force us to trade said American for said Russian.
In a perfect world, I'd agree with you. But unfortunately exactly this has been going on for (possibly) longer than you've been alive.
Not really. The people both sides grabbed during the Cold War were legitimate spies for the other side. Neither the USSR nor the US made a habit of nabbing random citizens of the adversary nation. Both were sane enough to understand the risks involved in that.
Putin sadly is in some ways more dangerous and certainly more crude in his methods than the old USSR.
Not Frederic Pryor. Although the Soviets *cough* The East Germans released him as part of the Powers/Abel swap.
I had never heard of that case. I stand corrected.
Brittney Griner's 9-Year Sentence Highlights
Stark Differences Between Russian and U.S. Pot Penaltieswhy you shouldn't break the laws of a country that's in a proxy war with your home country.FTFY
Even if we weren't in the high-tension mode we're in with Russia right now, the best advice is: Don't take CBD oil into the Former Soviet Union, or China... or really any other country... or any other country your plane might have to land in by way of getting to yet another country, unless you're prepared to understand the laws governing each location. Other countries tend to care very much about their social constructs, and will apply their bummer headtrip rules aggressively if they perceive they're being broken.
Griner was clearly sentenced to a nearly maximum term for political reasons. Nevertheless, the sentence is within the legal range permitted by Russian law.
The US will do that too, imposing unreasonably harsh, but legal, sentences on people who are considered undesirable by the regime for other reasons. Just look at what the Democrats have been doing over the past couple of years. And often, just the prosecution and pre-trial detention is the penalty in and of itself, even if the person is found not guilty. Griner's trial at least was rather speedy by US standards.
I can't imagine being more outraged by this over 6 months in jail and threatened with 20 for political speech.
absolutely this! came here to see if this obvious connection was made.
Sad to see it happens so late in the conversation. What country do the persecuted j6-ers get to be taken to to ease their unduly harsh sentences? They cant look to the US government for salvation for at least 2 more years... let this chick stew for another couple years.
(but of course that wont happen - she'll be out no matter the cost easily within that time frame). In her case the cost of getting her out is a mere couple of death merchants or spys ... in the J6er case it is the cost of keeping them IN - and that just costs the integrity of the US constitution - so ... i guess no biggee there.
Though, it seems, best I can tell, that this is a political thing as much as anything. Marijuana charges just happen to be what they went with.
Meanwhile, Russia has extremely high rates of alcoholism and liver cirrhosis, while life expectancy has declined in recent decades due to excessive alcohol consumption.
Actually the encouragement of alcoholism has been a method of government oppression in Russia for centuries. This is a fascinating video on the subject. I had no idea about the history of Vodka and its use a means of oppression in Russia until I watched this.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vK7l55ZOVIc&t=4s
She didn't get that sentence for weed vapes.
Also, Jeffrey Epstein didn't kill himself.
Of course, it is of no significance what the US penalty is. Nor the penalty in Denmark or the UK or Afghanistan.
She broke Russian law, she gets Russian punishment.
Any US citizen traveling to Russia or Communist China or Iran is out of their mind these days.
no sympathy from me. she knowingly violated russian law and is now bearing the consequences. she's a complete dumbass and deserves what she gets. maybe next time she travels she'll make better decisions. the penalties one might receive for the same crime in the us is irrelevant -- she was in russia violating their laws. she needs to watch midnight express.
I suppose we will never know how native Russians have been punished for the same crime. If they all got multi-year imprisonment, then Griner's sentence was just. If most of them got short sentences, or probation, then international politics was involved.
Duh. Show me a libertarian party on the Czarist ballot. Griner is getting exactly the same treatment everyone but preppies got before there was a Reason magazine or Libertarian Party. What you are seeing is the cumulative value of pre-Anschluss spoiler vote leverage. It is time to reboot the original LP platform and reestablish 12% yearly growth in vote share.
Although, I am completely against very concept of putting somebody in prison for even one minute for possession of cannabis in an amount that is clearly for personal use, I don't have much sympathy for this one. First, there is absolutely no possibility that she didn't know that she had the cannabis packed. Could she be ignorant enough to think that just because liberal district attorneys in many places in the United States no longer prosecute Black people for any crimes that she would somehow get a free pass in Russia as an Uber intersectional? Maybe she didn't realize what a poor relationship the United States has had with Russia for many years now. We are far past the days of the depiction in so many movies from the 70s where the scared American child demands to speak to somebody at the embassy and is immediately sprung regardless of whatever local laws they have violated. Among other things, that was the way we had handled banana republics not Russia. Maybe she was so stoned that she just had no idea what was going on and made the typical type of bad decisions that hard-core stoners always make.
Apparently the party of slavery's Kamala bragged about stiff sentences for marijuana - when it was convenient for her anyways.
She is well known for taking a knee during the national anthem and making negative remarks about the United States.
It will be extremely interesting to see what she says when we trade an arms dealer to get her freed so she can return to the country she dislikes so much.
The United States is superior to Russia in almost every way.
Let’s see if she can bring herself to say that when she gets home.