Massachusetts governor to pardon misdemeanor charges linked to marijuana possession

Marijuana buds are seen close-up.
Associated Press
About 17.7 million people in 2022 recorded daily or near-daily marijuana use, according to a study.

Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey (D) announced Wednesday that she intends to pardon misdemeanor marijuana possession charges, a move that could impact hundreds of thousands of Bay State residents. 

“Nobody should face barriers to getting a job, housing or an education because of an old misdemeanor marijuana conviction that they would not be charged for today,” Healey said in a statement. “We’re taking this nation-leading action as part of our commitment to using the clemency process to advance fairness and equity in our criminal justice system.”

Healey lauded the action as a follow-up to President Biden’s federal pardon of marijuana possession charges in 2022 and expansion of the move in December, which impacted thousands of people.

Biden had called on states to follow his lead.

“Just as no one should be in a federal prison solely due to the use or possession of marijuana, no one should be in a local jail or state prison for that reason, either,” he said last year.

The pardons would apply to simple marijuana possession charges and not to those that include distribution, trafficking or driving under the influence, the governor’s office said. Most people impacted by the pardons would not have to take action.

Healey’s proclamation must first be approved by the Governor’s Council. The pardons would take effect immediately upon the council’s approval, though they would take time to update in state records, the governor’s office said.

State Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell (D) praised the action as critical to rectify racial injustices in policing.

“Convictions for simple marijuana possession — which someone could not be charged with today — have led to the disproportionate incarceration of Black and brown people and made it nearly impossible for them to obtain a job, housing, educational opportunities and more,” Campbell said in a statement. “As the AG’s Office also works to address injustice and close the racial wealth gap, this proposed pardon meaningfully moves the Commonwealth in the right direction.”

Marijuana was legalized in Massachusetts in 2016, and a booming industry has formed in the state despite the drug remaining illegal federally.

Multiple other states have also made mass-pardons for marijuana possession offenses in recent years, including Missouri, Connecticut and Rhode Island.

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