Four Months After Biden Promised Marijuana Pardons, He Has Not Issued Any
The president reaped political benefits with his pre-election proclamation but has yet to follow through.

It has been more than four months since President Joe Biden announced that he would pardon people convicted of simple marijuana possession under federal or D.C. law. At the time, the Justice Department said it would "expeditiously administer the President's proclamation." Toward that end, it said, "the Office of the Pardon Attorney will begin implementing a process to provide impacted individuals with certificates of pardon," thereby "restoring political, civil, and other rights." Yet according to the Office of the Pardon Attorney's website, "the Application for Certificate of Pardon for Simple Possession of Marijuana is not yet available."
It's not clear what the holdup is. I've asked the Justice Department and will update this post if and when I receive a reply. But Biden, after reaping political benefits by announcing the pardons a month before the midterm elections, has not actually issued any. He got good press and may have helped Democrats in the midterms by motivating voters who care about drug policy reform. But his promise remains just that until he does what he said he would do.
The U.S. Sentencing Commission (USSC) counted 6,577 U.S. citizens who would be eligible for the pardons that Biden promised. That analysis included people sentenced from FY 1992 through FY 2021, while Biden's proclamation applies to any U.S. citizen who "committed the offense of simple possession of marijuana" on or before October 6, 2022, the date of the proclamation. The USSC also identified 1,122 simple possession cases involving noncitizens who were legally living in the United States. Within that group, Biden's proclamation is limited to "lawful permanent residents." All told, the pardons, assuming that Biden gets around to issuing them, might benefit in the neighborhood of 10,000 people when cases before and after the period covered by the USSC's analysis are included.
As pardons go, that's a big deal. Journalists and activists reacted accordingly.
"Biden Pardons Thousands of People Convicted on Federal Marijuana Possession Charges," said the headline above an NPR report. The New York Times headline was similar: "Biden Pardons Thousands Convicted of Marijuana Possession Under Federal Law." The subhead said Biden's proclamation "represents a fundamental change in America's response to a drug that has been at the center of a clash between culture and policing for more than a half-century." Sixteen drug policy reform groups called it "a great first step," although they also noted that it "did nothing to address the thousands of federal cannabis prisoners currently incarcerated in federal prison."
As that complaint suggests, there were caveats. Biden's proclamation did not include people convicted of growing or distributing marijuana, and the pardons would not free a single federal prisoner. Federal convictions account for a tiny share of marijuana possession cases, which are typically prosecuted under state law. And although Biden said the criminal records of people who were prosecuted for "merely using or possessing marijuana" should be "totally expunged," the pardons would not accomplish that, because establishing an automatic expungement process would require new legislation.
Biden nevertheless averred that "my action will help relieve the collateral consequences arising from these convictions," which is plausible in at least some circumstances. "Expungement is a judicial remedy that is rarely granted by the court and cannot be granted within the Department of Justice or by the President," the Office of the Pardon Attorney warns. "If you were to be granted a presidential pardon, the pardoned offense would not be removed from your criminal record." Instead, "the federal conviction [and] the pardon would both appear on your record." But "a pardon will facilitate removal of legal disabilities imposed because of the conviction," the office says, "and should lessen to some extent the stigma arising from the conviction. In addition, a pardon may be helpful in obtaining licenses, bonding, or employment."
Morgan Fox, political director at the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), notes in an email that a presidential pardon is no guarantee that an employer, landlord, or licensing authority will disregard a marijuana possession conviction. "The decision about whether or not the presence of a conviction—even if pardoned—will impact the applicant will usually be left to the employer or other relevant entity," Fox says. But "a pardon recipient can present the pardon certificate directly to the entity performing a background check," he adds, and the pardon also should appear on the official record.
As NORML put it in a press release, "the pardon certificate can go a long way toward helping someone with a conviction to avoid the many collateral consequences associated with a criminal record and live a more fulfilling life." But people will receive that benefit only if Biden actually issues the pardons he promised. "Thousands of people with federal criminal records for simple marijuana possession are eligible for a pardon that would help them obtain employment, housing, education, and more," NORML noted. "Many of the people who are eligible for these pardons have been waiting years for relief. They shouldn't have to wait any longer."
Writing in The Hill, NORML Deputy Director Paul Armentano calls Biden's proclamation "truly historic" because "never before had a sitting president overtly acknowledged the failures of America's nearly century-old experiment with cannabis prohibition." But despite the "congratulatory brouhaha" that followed Biden's announcement, Armentano notes, "none" of the people that the USSC identified as eligible for pardons has received one.
Touting the Biden administration's accomplishments on Twitter in December, Domestic Policy Council Director Susan Rice bragged that Biden had "addressed our failed approach to marijuana by pardoning all federal and D.C. simple marijuana possession offenses." That claim was and remains premature.
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"I was going to pardon some felons ... but I got high."
---Joe Biden, in the style of Afroman.
He's a bigger liar than Santos or Blumenthal.
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Biden put up a smoke screen
This is the most shocking article ever.
It is amazing that, with the midterms over, Biden is not rushing this through. Sounds legit.
That's my feeling, he is waiting until 6 months before the next election.
Meanwhile, in Missouri:
The new recreational marijuana law that just went into effect dedicates any state tax revenue from recreational sales to the legal costs associated with tracking down past marijuana convictions and expunging them from anyone and everyone's records.
Automatically. No paperwork, no processing, no forms.
Those hicklib republican bastards in flyover country, damn them to hell.
And their MAGA hats.
I am glad MO has legalized recreational pot - but there are only a couple other R states who have done that. Montana and Arizona?
That is because Joe Biden (D) sucks
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>>It's not clear what the holdup is.
really?
But his promise remains just that until he does what he said he would do.
Did he give you his word as a Biden? Did he tell you this was the God's honest truth, not a joke? Did he promise you no malarkey, Jack? That's how you can tell he's serious and totally not lying. Unless you can see his lips moving and then you know he's lying his ass off.
Sullum seems surprised.
Well, he is a demented old fart; he probably just forgot.
Or his devious evil twin classified them and stuck them in the garage.
Yeah, that's my assessment. He can't remember that he promised to do that.
I vote for this answer too. Came to make the same comment, but actually thought to check before I posted.
Legalized pot is a federal honey trap.
Think Mao's Hundred Flowers campaign. Don't take the bait, particularly if you own firearms.
Biden lied? Let me check my calendar....ah yes, it is indeed a day ending in y.
Also, off topic but why isn't Reason covering the Ohio train crash?
Local news that show the epa and dot are super competent
Everyone knows the best way to get rid of toxic waste is to blow it up.
Fun fact: The Biden regime has just rejected Ohio’s request for federal aid.
"Fun fact: The Biden regime has just rejected Ohio’s request for federal aid."
They did what? On what grounds?
Do not know why they refused....but refuse they did.
Pretty lame.
That Ohio is run by a republican?
They're trying to cut spending, of course!
Also, Mayor Pete tries to blame Trump:
...on Tuesday, Buttigieg claimed, “We’re constrained by law on some areas of rail regulation,” and cited “the braking rule withdrawn by the Trump administration in 2018 because of a law passed by Congress in 2015.”
Brietbart Fact Check:
Buttigieg’s assertion, however, is incorrect.
National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) Chair Jennifer Homendy announced on Thursday that if this particular rule were to have gone into effect, the mandate would have applied only to trains classified as high-hazard flammable trains.
“This means even if the rule had gone into effect, this train wouldn’t have had ECP brakes,” Homendy said, and she suggested that anyone who says otherwise is “spreading misinformation.”
On Thursday, Norfolk Southern corroborated Homendy’s comments, telling Breitbart News that the train in question “was not considered a high-hazard flammable train.”
Therefore, the braking rule cited by Buttigieg would not have applied to the train operated by Norfolk Southern that derailed in East Palestine earlier this month.
What is more, Buttigieg has been the Transportation Secretary for two years now. So if he is, in fact, worried about alleged constraints regarding areas of rail regulation, he has had time to address these concerns.
Same reason they're not covering the United States committing an act of war against Russia and our European allies, I would guess.
Because it's no big deal,no one even injured.
I think the commenters a missing the big picture, sullum finally realized who the president is
Confusion in Chief Biden meant that he was going to get a hard-on for some fellatio. Pity the poor intern.
It's not clear what the holdup is. I've asked the Justice Department and will update this post if and when I receive a reply. But Biden, after reaping political benefits by announcing the pardons a month before the midterm elections, has not actually issued any.
To be fair to Biden, the holdup is probably the difficulty in finding anyone convicted of simple marijuana possession under federal law, which is why in the WH statement on this very issue, it said that this was mostly a symbolic gesture and really required the states to step up.
Of course he was lying; his lips moved.
Dude, I'll get right on that... just gonna chill for a bit, bro...
What's the hold up? Biden forgot about that pledge roughly 20 seconds after making it.
Biden is very close to be the worst president during my lifetime. Trump was a mediocre president who was hounded by a hostile media. Biden is a disastrous president who has a sycophantic media.
Neither should have ever been president, but Biden is much much worse.
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'Susan Rice bragged that Biden had "addressed our failed approach to marijuana by pardoning all federal and D.C. simple marijuana possession offenses." That claim was and remains premature.'
He _intended_ to do it, so it's as good as done - the leftist excuse for every one of their failures.