Every Two Minutes, Someone in America Is Arrested for Marijuana
The United States may have dozens of legal cannabis markets and billions in annual sales, but prohibition hasn’t gone away. According to advocates, someone is still arrested for marijuana every two minutes in this country.
Most of those arrests involve nothing more than simple possession. People are still handcuffed, booked, and funneled into the criminal system. For many, that means jail time. And for nearly all, it means living with the collateral consequences of a criminal record: lost jobs, lost housing, lost opportunities.
Progress and Pushback
Over the past decade, arrests have dropped dramatically as legalization and decriminalization spread. NORML estimates that more than 2.4 million Americans have had cannabis convictions expunged or vacated in recent years. Cities in prohibition states have adopted municipal reforms, and entire states have moved to legal markets.
But the crackdown hasn’t disappeared. Idaho lawmakers are reimposing harsh penalties. Texas courts are striking down decriminalization ordinances. Ohio legislators are moving to undo parts of voter-approved legalization.
This mix of progress and backlash is why advocates say the fight is far from over.
Why It Matters
NORML, which has spent more than 50 years pushing to end prohibition, argues that the greatest harm associated with cannabis is still its criminalization. Even as voters embrace legalization, millions of Americans remain at risk of arrest, often for small amounts of a plant that’s legal across state borders.
For High Times readers, the numbers speak for themselves: cannabis arrests may be down, but they haven’t stopped. The freedom to consume responsibly without fear of police intervention is still not universal.