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March 6, 2023
Five months after mass marijuana possession pardons, DOJ announces application form for certificates
Back in October 2022, as detailed here, Prez Biden granted a mass pardon to "all current United States citizens and lawful permanent residents who committed the offense of simple possession of marijuana in violation of the Controlled Substances Act, as currently codified at 21 U.S.C. 844 and as previously codified elsewhere in the United States Code, or in violation of D.C. Code 48–904.01(d)(1), on or before the date of this proclamation." But, perhaps problematically for some, a mass pardon done not readily come with the certificate or other official documentation that individuals often received when receiving a more traditional, individualized grant of clemency.
To address this issue, I had heard that the Pardon Attorney office in the US Justice Department was working on a process to issue pardon documentation. And, this past Friday, this DOJ press release addressed this matter under the heading "Justice Department Announces Application Form for Marijuana Pardon Certificates." Here are the particulars (with links from the original):
[T]he Justice Department is launching an application for eligible individuals to receive certificate of proof that they were pardoned under the Oct. 6, 2022, proclamation by President Biden. On Oct. 6, 2022, the President announced a full, unconditional and categorical pardon for prior federal and D.C. offenses of simple possession of marijuana. The President’s pardon lifts barriers to housing, employment and educational opportunities for thousands of people with those prior convictions. President Biden directed the Justice Department to develop a process for individuals to receive their certificate of pardon.
The online application will be available on the Office of the Pardon Attorney’s website: Application for Certificate of Pardon. The web form allows eligible persons to submit documentation to the Office of the Pardon Attorney and receive a certificate indicating the person was pardoned on Oct. 6, 2022, for simple possession of marijuana.
The President’s pardon, effective Oct. 6, 2022, may assist pardoned persons by removing civil or legal disabilities — such as restrictions on the right to vote, to hold office or to sit on a jury — that are imposed because of the pardoned conviction. The application released today may also be helpful as proof of pardon for those who seek to obtain licenses, bonding or employment. As President Biden said at the time of the proclamation, his action intends to “help relieve the consequences arising from these convictions.”
Those who were pardoned on Oct. 6, 2022, are eligible for a certificate of pardon. Consistent with the proclamation, to be eligible for a certificate, an applicant must have been charged or convicted of simple possession of marijuana in either a federal court or D.C. Superior Court, and the applicant must have been lawfully within the United States at the time of the offense. Similarly, an individual must have been a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident on Oct. 6, 2022.
Those who were convicted of state marijuana offenses do not qualify for the pardon.
The department is committed to carefully and expeditiously reviewing the applications and issuing certificates to those pardoned under the proclamation. For more information regarding eligibility and answers to frequently asked questions, please visit Presidential Proclamation on Marijuana Possession.
Prior related posts from October 2022:
- October surprise: Prez Biden announces he is "pardoning all prior federal offenses of simple marijuana possession"! Wow!
- A few more details about President Biden's mass pardon of federal offenses of simple possession of marijuana
- Rounding up a few (of many) reactions to Prez Biden's marijuana possession pardons
- Prez Biden's one miss in his marijuana moves: failing to urge Congress to move on federal record relief mechanisms
- US Sentencing Commission produces "additional analyses" of those receiving federal marijuana possession pardons
March 6, 2023 at 01:28 PM | Permalink
Comments
Didn't Jimmy Carter grant a mass pardon for Vietnam draft-dodgers? That obviously worked.
Posted by: federalist | Mar 6, 2023 2:12:58 PM
Federalist,
As I understand it with Carter, the majority of his mass clemency recipients had not actually been convicted. He was, in effect, saying "we won't go after you for this now-passed behavior". I don't believe the same applies here.
Posted by: Soronel Haetir | Mar 6, 2023 3:48:26 PM
On January 21, 1977,Jimmy Carter's first full day in office as President, he signed Executive Order 11967, which pardoned all who had violated the Selective Service Act during the Vietnam War years, by failing to register for the draft, or by evading the draft by fleeing to Canada, or another county. The mass pardon included both those who had been prosecuted and those who had not been formally prosecuted.
Posted by: Jim Gormley | Mar 6, 2023 4:42:00 PM