Friday, 2 August 2019

Canada begins pardoning pot possession convictions

Canada became the first developed nation to legalize the use of recreational marijuana last October.

Lars Hagberg/Agence France-Presse via Getty Images
File photo: Upwards of 250,000 Canadians may have such a conviction, Liberal Justice Minister David Lametti said, though he added it was hard to get an exact figure because of differences in reporting systems between provinces and police jurisdictions.
By Moira Warburton | Reuters

TORONTO – Canada has begun issuing pardons for people who were convicted of simple possession of cannabis and do not have other criminal records, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government announced on Thursday.

Canada became the first developed nation to legalize the use of recreational marijuana last October. The pardon system for cannabis possession convictions fulfills a promise made by Trudeau during the 2015 election campaign.

Upwards of 250,000 Canadians may have such a conviction, Liberal Justice Minister David Lametti said, though he added it was hard to get an exact figure because of differences in reporting systems between provinces and police jurisdictions.

Many Canadians, particularly black and indigenous Canadians, are saddled with the “lingering consequences” of a system in which cannabis was illegal, Lametti said at a press conference in Montreal.

Under the previous system, Canadians with a cannabis possession conviction had to wait five years before applying for a pardon and pay the parole board $631 ($478 in USD), Lametti said. Those requirements have been removed under the new system.

“People can finally shed the burden and stigma of that criminal record and move forward positively with their lives,” he said.

The pardon process will be open to those whose only criminal record is a cannabis possession conviction. It will be available online starting on Thursday.


Canadians who are eligible for the pardon will be able to cross the border into the United States without issue, because the record of the conviction will be removed from the Canadian database, Lametti said.

“We’re hoping by expediting the process to make the number of people who have access to the pardon reach into the thousands,” Lametti said.


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