“When you look at the number of people in our
state and federal penitentiaries, who are there for possession of small
amounts of cannabis, you begin to really scratch your head. We have
literally filled up our jails with people who are nonviolent and frankly
do not belong there.”
—Former House speaker John A. Boehner (R-Ohio), in an interview with Bloomberg News, April 11, 2018
Boehner, who once opposed marijuana legalization, made headlines recently when he announced he had joined the advisory board of Acreage Holdings,
a multi-state cannabis company with holdings in both medical and
adult-use states. His shift shows that acceptance of marijuana use has
increasingly become mainstream.
But that doesn’t
mean the facts have followed. In explaining his decision, Boehner
repeated a myth — that the United States has “filled up our jails” with
nonviolent people whose only crime was that they possessed marijuana.
The Facts
There’s
no question that in the United States, many people are arrested for
marijuana possession. Nearly 600,000 people a year are arrested for
marijuana possession, or more than one marijuana possession arrest every
minute, according to estimates from Justice Department data.
But
relatively few of those arrested end up in prison. Most prisoners are
in state systems, and the Department of Justice does not break down
exactly the percentage of people who are in prison for marijuana
possession — just all types of drug possession, including hard drugs
such as heroin. The federal data, however, does provide that breakdown.
So
what do we find? In the state correctional institutions, only 3.4
percent of prisoners were in jail for all types of drug possession as of
Dec. 31, 2015, according to the Justice Department.
While Boehner claimed that the prisons have been filled with nonviolent
prisoners, the data show that 54.5 percent are in prison for violent
crimes such as murder, rape and robbery and 18 percent involve property
crimes; another 11.6 percent are in prison for public order offenses.
In
the federal system, the numbers for marijuana possession are
astonishingly low. Only 92 people in 2017 were sentenced for marijuana
possession in the federal system out of a total of nearly 20,000 drug
convictions, according to the U.S. Sentencing Commission.
That is one-half of 1 percent. Out of all of the drug possession
charges, marijuana possession made up 43 percent of all of the drug
possession cases.
If
that ratio held true in the state prison population, that would mean
about 19,000 prisoners for marijuana possession, out of 1.3 million.
That’s about 1.5 percent.
Jonathan P. Caulkins,
professor of public policy at Carnegie Mellon University, noted that
when reviewing the data, it’s important to remember that there are
several ways that simple marijuana possession can lead to incarceration:
It was a violation of probation or parole for another conviction; it
was part of a charge bargain down from a more serious offense; it was a
“third” strike under some three-strike laws (e.g., if on probation or
parole, then a misdemeanor can be promoted to a felony so it can be a
third felony).
“He is wrong,” Caulkins
said. “He is parroting the pro-legalization party line that has been
making such claims for a long time. The standard story that the
legalization lobby pushes is very rare for prison, and is not terribly
common for jail.”
Dave Schnittger, a Boehner spokesman, initially defended Boehner’s statement by directing The Fact Checker to a 2017 report that appeared in Newsweek.
The article, without citing a source, said that marijuana possession
accounts “for more than five percent of all incarcerations, or roughly
100,000 Americans.” He said this article “was the basis for the
speaker’s assertion.”
Since
this was directly contradicted by the Justice Department data, we
sought an explanation. It turned out that either through a reporting or
editing error, Newsweek garbled a statistic borrowed from a Washington Post article.
After our inquiry, Newsweek quickly corrected the article to say that
marijuana possession accounts for more than 5 percent of all arrests,
not incarcerations.
In other words, Boehner relied on a bum news report without seeking confirmation from an official source.
“It’s
no secret that America’s jails are overcrowded; Speaker Boehner’s point
was that the incarceration of nonviolent individuals for possession of
small amounts of cannabis is contributing to the overcrowding problem
and that adjusting our laws to reflect changing public sentiment on the
issue, as many states today are already doing, can help address the
problem,” Schnittger said.
“The speaker is not attempting to make the
claim that incarcerations for marijuana possession are the primary
reason America’s prisons are overcrowded. He is arguing that our prisons
are overcrowded, and that reducing the number of people who are
incarcerated for something that many Americans today no longer even
believe should be illegal is a logical place to look when we’re looking
for ways to stop ‘filling up our jails.’”
The Pinocchio Test
We
often warn politicians that they should not simply rely on a news
report for information.
The Newsweek report should have raised a red
flag to anyone who had studied the federal data — and indeed it was
wrong. Kudos to Newsweek for quickly correcting the story.
Under
no stretch of the imagination has the United States “literally filled
up our jails with people who are nonviolent.” Very few people end up in
prison for marijuana possession, and those who do are probably there for
another complicating factor. Boehner says he doesn’t personally
indulge, inhaling only Camel cigarettes. But either way, he’s blowing
smoke here.
He earns Four Pinocchios.
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