LPP Urges USSC To Exclude Prior Cannabis Possession Offenses from Criminal History Scores

Stephen Post • July 24, 2024

Read our full comment with citations here.


United States Sentencing Commission

One Columbus Circle, N.E., Suite 2-500

Washington, D.C. 20002

Attn: Public Affairs – Priorities Comment


Dear United States Sentencing Commissioners,


The Last Prisoner Project (“LPP”) submits the following comments to the United States Sentencing Commission (“the Commission” or “USSC) in response to the Commission’s request for comment on possible policy priorities for the 2024-2025 amendment cycle. LPP commends the Commission for taking steps to better reflect the current legal and policy landscape surrounding cannabis activity in the United States, and specifically the recent amendment #821 C, which allows for a downward departure to a criminal history score for a prior cannabis possession conviction. We would like to take this opportunity to urge the Commission to further amend the sentencing guidelines to exclude prior cannabis possession offenses from criminal history scores entirely, so that they are not used to increase criminal sentences for subsequent offenses.


We also want to thank the Commission for clarifying via Amendment #814 that retroactive changes to law can be considered as extraordinary and compelling factors for a sentence reduction motion under section 3582(c)(1)(A) in the case of an “unusually long sentence”. Given the widespread and significant changes to the legality and public perception of cannabis, we would, however, ask that the Commission not limit the use of a retroactive change in law to individuals serving at least ten years of imprisonment.


We also would like to address the Commission’s oversight of drug sentencing and the Drug Quantity and Drug Conversion Tables (hereinafter, the Tables). Specifically, we urge the Commission to conduct a complete review and revision of the Tables.


Sentencing Guidelines Should Reflect Current Notions of Criminality


In your 2023 publication “Weighing the Impact of Simple Possession of Marijuana” the Commission noted the shifting sentiment towards cannabis at both the state and federal level and the Commission again noted these changes in law when promulgating amendment #821 Part C. Today, 24 states and the District of Columbia have fully legalized cannabis for adult-use while only three states have no public cannabis access program.1 These state-legal marketplaces generate billions of dollars not just in sales, but also in tax revenue for these jurisdictions, all while cannabis remains federally illegal and the criminal status of cannabis continues to lead to hundreds of thousands of arrests each year.


Now, the federal government is poised to reclassify cannabis–following the Health and HumanServices Department’s recommendation in late 2023, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) recently announced its decision to reschedule cannabis to Schedule III. This move demonstrates the federal government’s shifting policy approach to cannabis as a less harmful substance with medicinal benefits.


In conjunction with prospective changes to cannabis laws, local, state and federal political leaders are increasingly taking concrete action to mitigate the past harms caused by decades of cannabis prohibition. In October of 2022, President Biden pardoned all federal simple marijuana possession offenses and formally encouraged state governors to do the same, an action he expanded upon in late 2023.5 Officials have followed suit, as evidenced by former Oregon Governor Kate Brown pardoning over 45,000 individuals with marijuana convictions and Connecticut Governor Ned Lamont announcing the automatic clearing of over 44,000 cannabis records. City officials in places like New Orleans and Birmingham have also taken steps to pardon municipal marijuana possession offenses.8 These actions signify that, beyond the shifting legal landscape for cannabis use, public perception of cannabis has also changed. The vast majority of Americans, including the sitting President, no longer feel that cannabis use is something that should be criminalized. We have changed our approach to criminalizing cannabis, and thus, the US Sentencing Guidelines must be adjusted to reflect this current climate. Continuing to punish individuals for an activity that is legal for a majority of Americans does not comport with our country’s shared values of justice and fairness. It is only fitting that any marijuana offense, including but not

limited to simple possession, should be eliminated from consideration as a factor in calculating

an individual’s criminal history score for sentencing purposes.


Removing Marijuana Offenses from Criminal History Scores will Result in More Equitable

Sentencing


When one considers the well-documented racial disparities found in the enforcement of cannabis laws, it is clear that excluding marijuana offenses from criminal history scores will also result in a more equitable approach to sentencing.


In 2013, a report from the American Civil Liberties Union found that, despite virtually indistinguishable rates of cannabis consumption amongst racial groups, Black residents of the United States were 3.73 times as likely to be arrested for marijuana possession than their white counterparts. A 2020 follow-up to the ACLU report found that, despite several states legalizing or decriminalizing cannabis, these racial disparities remained essentially unchanged. Data indicates that these racial disparities appear to persist in conviction rates and sentencing. As sentencing guidelines are meant to be considered objectively and reflect an accurate prediction of an individual's criminality, removing marijuana convictions from individuals’ criminal history scores would be a step toward creating a more equitable sentencing process. In addition, excluding marijuana convictions from consideration altogether is also in line with the current administration’s position on the criminality of cannabis use. As President Biden stated, “sending people to prison for possessing marijuana has upended too many lives and incarcerated people for conduct that many states no longer prohibit.”13 If permanently enacted, this proposed amendment would help alleviate, or at the very least not further exacerbate, the racial disparities in our criminal legal system.


It’s also worth noting that the availability of avenues through which individuals can clear marijuana possession offenses from their records is highly dependent on the jurisdiction in which the offense took place. As noted above, many executive offices (whether it be the president, state governors, or mayors) have pardoned all simple marijuana possession offenses. In some jurisdictions, like Oregon, that pardon results in automatic record clearance. However, in most jurisdictions, pardoned offenses still appear on an individual’s criminal record, perpetuating barriers to employment, housing, and educational opportunities (to name just a few of the

collateral consequences accompanying even a low-level marijuana conviction).


Although several states have established methods for individuals to expunge or remove previous marijuana-related convictions, disparities still exist among those who can access this relief successfully. Clearing one's record can be overwhelming, especially for individuals lacking a legal background, technical knowledge, or easy access to criminal records and court filings. Eligible individuals with language barriers or illiteracy also struggle to clear their records. Consequently, race and socioeconomic status often determine who can overcome these difficulties and access record clearing and expungement. Unfortunately, most eligible individuals do not complete these record-clearing processes.


This disparity in accessing record-clearing mechanisms for marijuana offenses is yet another inequality present in the Commission’s current guidelines, which include marijuana possession offenses in criminal history scores. It’s unfair that those who, for the reasons named above, could not clear their records successfully are subject to harsher sentencing ranges.


A Marijuana Conviction is Not a Valid Predictor of Future Criminality


The US Sentencing Guidelines Manual states that a “defendant with a record of prior criminal behavior is more culpable than a first offender and thus deserving of greater punishment.” The manual goes on to note that because “[r]epeated criminal behavior is an indicator of a limited likelihood of successful rehabilitation,” an individual’s criminal history must be considered during the sentencing phase “[t]o protect the public from further crimes of the…defendant.”


In the case of a simple marijuana possession offense, however, there is little correlation between cannabis use and criminality. According to a national study of recidivism, individuals convicted of drug offenses have significantly lower recidivism rates than those convicted of violent or property-related crimes. Additionally, a 2020 report authored by the Commission found that individuals convicted of marijuana-related offenses have one of the lowest rates of recidivism when compared to other drug offenses. In one of the few available studies on recidivism rates for individuals where drug possession (as opposed to trafficking) was their primary offense, the rate of recidivism was incredibly low as compared to national averages.


In short, as there is no evidence that marijuana possession convictions are valid predictors of

future criminal behavior (and thus do not endanger public safety), they should be excluded from

individuals’ criminal history score calculations.


Changes to Laws and Attitudes Surrounding Cannabis Also Warrant an Amendment to the Commission’s Compassionate Release Policy Statement


In promulgating Amendment #814 the Commission described the circumstances in which an intervening change in the law can qualify as an extraordinary and compelling factor warranting compassionate release. The Commission clarified that such changes to the law may be considered if an applicant otherwise meets the factors warranting a sentence reduction or that such a change on its own could constitute an extraordinary and compelling factor if the case involves an “unusually long sentence” and the applicant has served at least ten years of a term of imprisonment.


As the Commission noted in its Amendment: “One of the expressed purposes of section 3582(c)(1)(A) when it was enacted in 1984 was to provide a narrow avenue for judicial relief from unusually long sentences. Having abolished parole in the interest of certainty in sentencing, Congress recognized the need for such judicial authority.” Thus, compassionate release serves a critical function in providing relief where it is clear that the length of a term of imprisonment does not comport with modern laws and attitudes surrounding the criminal activity at hand.


As described above, we now face a situation where thousands of federal prisoners remainincarcerated for activity that has been broadly legalized at the state level and that many are now profiting from. Our federal government has now also changed its stance on the dangerousness of cannabis and has acknowledged that cannabis has medicinal benefits. Given these circumstances, an individual serving a nine-year sentence for a controlling cannabis offense can credibly argue that their sentence is “unusually long” for the offense they are sentenced under. While cannabis may represent the offense that has seen the most pronounced change to its legal status in recent history, it is an all too common occurrence in American history that our beliefs, sentiments, and even scientific consensus evolve faster than our laws and their associated criminal penalties. As the remaining mechanism for relief for federal prisoners incarcerated under unjust laws, the compassionate release factors should be applied broadly enough not to exclude individuals whose sentences are unjust and excessive, but may not meet the ten year requirement, even if no other compassionate release factors apply.


Changes to Drug Laws More Broadly Warrant a Reevaluation of the Drug Quantity and Drug Conversion Tables


While over fifty years of ongoing political and educational messaging demonizing drug use and

stigmatizing drug users has failed to realize a drug-free world, the underlying racial and social motivations have succeeded. Since its inception, the drug war has been overwhelmingly enforced in BIPOC communities, especially low-income ones, causing the country’s inflated prison population to be disproportionately comprised of Black, Latino, and Indigenous people. It has led to lengthy terms of imprisonment for relatively low-level offenses and for those with little to no criminal history, which perpetuates cycles of trauma and violence. The same conditions have fueled and perpetuated violence internationally and in inner-city neighborhoods nationwide, and have led to increases in concentration, adulteration, and toxicity of the substances themselves.


An increasingly multi-partisan coalition is calling for change. In 2017, the USSC published a report describing, in part, how drug-related mandatory minimum penalties have been "applied more broadly than Congress may have anticipated.” Such non-discretionary sentencing fails to promote public health. Instead, it has the effect of incarcerating people for longer amounts of time than the evidence shows deters further criminal activity.


While reversing and mending the harms of the war on drugs will take effort from people across the government and political spectrum, one way to shift policy in a more humane direction–and in alignment with contemporary evidence–is to go to one of the current roots of the problem: drug sentencing. The Drug Quantity and Drug Conversion Tables, set by the USSC, are used as a benchmark for federal drug sentencing and are often referenced or relied on in state sentencing decisions. Bringing these Tables into alignment with modern research about drug risks and harms would lead to more accuracy in sentencing decisions, which would both alleviate some of the socioeconomic harms of the drug war and save public funds, without risking public safety.


Given that the Tables presently translate quantities of various illegal drugs into their marijuana-equivalent quantities for the purpose of determining relative harm, it would be appropriate to utilize the multi-agency review already happening with cannabis to review and update the tables. Additional research about other historically stigmatized substances should also inform this review. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) granted a breakthrough therapy designation to MDMA-assisted therapy in 2017, and again granted two breakthrough therapy designations for psilocybin in treatment-resistant depression in 2018 and major depressive disorder in 2019. In 2024, the FDA extended the same status to an LSD formula for the treatment of generalized anxiety disorder. The FDA is also reviewing a new drug application for MDMA-assisted therapy, for which they will likely have a decision by August 2024.


Meanwhile, there has been growing bipartisan support to fund clinical trials exploring the use of psychedelics to treat traumatic brain injuries, depression, military sexual trauma, and post-traumatic stress disorder in veterans. For instance, in the 2024 National Defense Authorization Act, the Department of Defense authorized funding a study on psychedelics for the treatment of PTSD in military members. In March 2024, the Department of Veterans Affairs passed a budget allocating $20 million for clinical trials for MDMA and psilocybin. The National Institutes of Health has also opened funding opportunities for studying psychedelic-assisted therapy for chronic pain in older adults. This shift in the evidence base, and concurrent changes in federal policy, reflects an increasing willingness and mandate to reevaluate long-held assumptions about controlled substances, paving the way for more drug policies driven by data rather than dogma.


Alongside the evidence and government agencies, recent polls have found an overwhelming majority of American voters are also eager for a new approach to drug laws and responses to drug-related offenses. Over 60% support ending the War on Drugs; “eliminating criminal penalties for drug possession and reinvesting drug enforcement resources into treatment and addiction services”; repealing mandatory minimum sentences for drug crimes; and commuting, or reducing, the sentences of people incarcerated for drugs. Representing one of “the few truly bipartisan issues in American politics,” the “breadth and depth of support for change suggests that there are few issues for which the nation’s laws so misrepresent the preferences of the American people as for drugs.”


Despite these widespread calls for evidence-based policies and new approaches for regulating controlled substances, the Tables remain based on outdated medical, scientific, and sociological information. Not only do they recommend disproportionately severe penalties, they have no basis in the actual risks posed by each substance, the realities of the illicit drug market, criminal culpability, or other public safety factors. Congress and this Commission have already acknowledged that the Tables have resulted in outrageous sentencing disparities for otherwise similar behaviors, at least in the context of crack versus powder cocaine. For the Tables to be more in line with the Controlled Substances Act’s stated process for regulation, there is a serious need for the USSC to re-evaluate sentences based on “current scientific knowledge regarding the drug or other substance,” potentially positive “pharmacological effect[s],”42 and likelihood of misuse and dependence.


Any inquiry should take into account ways harm reduction approaches, public education, and proven methods of avoiding harm and use among minors can reduce the likelihood of misuses and dependence. Revising the Tables would likely lead to a reduction in resources spent on enforcement, prosecution, and punishment. Those resources could then be reinvested to bolster effective harm reduction and public education efforts.


Last Prisoner Project and countless other organizations across the political spectrum and around the country are coming together to organize and inform the USSC and the general public about the importance of this issue. The United States is long overdue for sentencing reform, and the urgency lies especially with drug-related offenses. As a complete review and revision of the Tables will likely require the USSC to conduct a multi-year study, the Commission must take an important first step to initiate such an inquiry now.


Conclusion


Like all components of criminal sentencing, criminal history score calculations should be proportionate to the offense and no greater than necessary to further the goal of public safety. Additionally, sentencing guidelines should be equitable and structured in a way that works to reduce racial disparities. By removing prior cannabis offenses from criminal history scores and allowing for changes to cannabis laws to be used as the sole basis for an extraordinary and compelling justification for release under 3582(c)(1)(A) the Commission can better achieve its goals of sentencing policies that align with fairness and justice.


In addition, we encourage the Commission to commit to conducting a reevaluation of the drug quantity and drug conversion tables more broadly given the available scientific and medical data.


We appreciate the opportunity to comment on this request and thank the Commission for its time and consideration.

By Stephanie Shepard May 14, 2025
When Alexander Kirk walked out of prison on December 10th, he stepped into a world that had shifted beneath his feet. But the shift wasn’t universal. In Iowa, where he lives, cannabis is still fully illegal. Drive two minutes across the bridge into Illinois, and that same plant, once the root of his decade-long incarceration, is not only legal but a booming, billion-dollar industry. That contradiction sits at the center of Alex’s story. He’s a father, a mechanic, a reader, and a deep thinker. He’s also someone who spent more than ten years of his life behind bars for the same substance that dispensaries now sell with flashy packaging and tax revenue incentives. “It’s crazy,” he says. “One side of the bridge is legal, the other side isn’t. It’s hard to believe.” A Life Interrupted Alex’s most recent sentence—ten years in federal prison—started with a bust that was as much about timing and proximity as anything else. He was on federal probation for a previous cannabis offense. A raid at a residence he didn’t live in, but where his truck was parked, ended with a federal indictment. A tip from his child’s mother, who was angry about a disagreement over vacation plans, helped open the door for the investigation. “She made a call, gave them a tip,” Alex recalls, without bitterness, just clarity. “And that’s all it took.” The charges? Conspiracy to distribute less than 50 kilograms of marijuana—a charge that, while less than the quantities tied to large-scale trafficking operations, still carried weight under federal law. He received 80 months for the new charge and another 40 months for violating parole. The math added up to a lost decade. “I had already done ten and a half years the first time,” Alex says. “I was institutionalized. Prison became familiar. It’s where I knew how to move.” But even when you know the rules, prison isn’t easy. The hardest part for Alex wasn’t the food, the routines, or the guards—it was missing his children growing up. “I got five kids. Three of the older ones talked to me after and explained how I chose the streets over them. That was hard. But it was true.” He reflects on it now with a kind of painful honesty: “I didn’t want to pay for weed, so I started selling it. I smoked, and I hustled. Eventually, it got out of hand.” Knowledge Behind Bars Alex didn’t spend his time in prison passively. He worked in the prison garage, learning to fix cars—something he’d loved as a kid. He dove into books and self-help titles. One that stuck with him was The Voice of Knowledge by Don Miguel Ruiz. “That one changed things,” he says. “It helped me realize everyone’s got their own story they’re telling themselves. That helped me stop taking things so personally.” He also began thinking about the world beyond prison. He drafted a business plan for a youth program designed to keep teens from ending up like him. “I wanted to show them they had options,” he says. “You don’t always get that when you grow up in survival mode.” The Politics of Legalization What’s jarring about Alex’s story is not just the sentence—it’s the fact that it happened while the national conversation around cannabis was changing rapidly. By the time Alex was halfway through his sentence, multiple states had legalized recreational marijuana. Billion-dollar brands were being built. Politicians were posing for ribbon-cuttings at dispensaries. Celebrities were launching product lines. And people like Alex were still behind bars. “It’s unjust,” he says bluntly. “There’s no reason someone should be locked up for weed while companies are out here getting rich off it. The little guy got crushed. They legalized it after locking us up, but didn’t let us out.” The irony was never lost on him: that he was doing hard time for something that was now a tax revenue stream in neighboring Illinois. A Second Chance and Real Support Alex’s sentence was reduced under the First Step Act—a federal law aimed at correcting some of the harshest penalties in the justice system. Thanks to that and a longer placement in a halfway house, he was released earlier than expected. Through a friend, he reconnected with a woman from his past who introduced him to the Last Prisoner Project (LPP) . At first, he was skeptical. “We never heard about people helping folks like us. I didn’t think it was real.” But he gave it a chance—and found not just advocacy, but consistency. “Even getting emails, updates, hearing from people… that helped. It made me feel like someone gave a damn.” Through LPP, he learned that he qualifies as a social equity candidate in states with legalization programs. That means access to business licenses and support that could help him transition into the legal cannabis industry. He also learned he might qualify for early termination of his probation—a process he’s now pursuing. “I want to get into the legal side,” he says. “I know the game. I lived it. Now I want to do it right.” Life After Prison Alex is currently working in the halfway house kitchen. He’s trying to stay grounded, focused, and patient. Reentry is never easy. “You come out and everything is fast. You feel like you’re behind. But I remind myself: it’s not a race.” He’s rebuilding relationships with his kids. He’s focused on starting a business—maybe something in cannabis or something with cars. He hasn’t fully decided, but he knows he wants to help others, too.  “There’s still a lot of people inside,” he says. “And they shouldn’t be. Not for weed. If we’re really gonna legalize it, let’s legalize it for everybody. That means letting people go.” “Get to Know Their Story” Alex doesn’t want pity. He’s not asking for a handout. What he wants is what most people want: a chance to live free, to work, to be with his family. To matter. “Just because someone’s been to prison doesn’t make them violent. Doesn’t make them a bad person. Get to know their story.” Alex’s story is one of transformation, not because the system rehabilitated him, but because he did the work on his own. Now he wants to use his experience to change the system itself. He’s already started.
By Lulanne Alexander May 6, 2025
Bill advances long-overdue justice and support for communities most impacted by the War on Drugs Philadelphia, PA — The Last Prisoner Project praised the Pennsylvania House for passing House Bill 1200 , a comprehensive cannabis legalization and regulation bill that centers justice, retroactive relief, and public health. Sponsored by Chair Dan Frankel, Representatives Rick Krajewski and, HB1200 charts a bold path forward for Pennsylvania to not only end cannabis prohibition but also repair the damage it has caused — especially to Black and Brown communities. "Pennsylvania is long overdue for cannabis reform, and while HB1200 is not perfect, it seeks to undo the deep harms of prohibition,” said Adrian Rocha, Director of Policy at the Last Prisoner Project . “This bill recognizes that legalization without justice is not enough. Through automatic expungement and retroactive relief, HB1200 sets a new standard for what responsible, people-first cannabis policy should look like. As the General Assembly continues to debate other important aspects of this bill, the Last Prisoner Project urges Pennsylvania lawmakers not lose lose sight of the broad consensus that legalization without retroactive relief is not best interest of justice or the Commonwealth. ” Despite shifting public opinion and growing national momentum, Pennsylvania continues to criminalize people for marijuana use. This criminalization has devastated families and communities, created an unregulated market, and deprived the state of much-needed tax revenue. HB1200 directly addresses these issues by including provisions for automatic expungement of past nonviolent cannabis offenses, sentence modification for those serving time for cannabis, investments in communities most impacted by the War on Drugs, and strong public health protections. HB 1200 will now move to through the Senate voting process.
By Stephen Post April 29, 2025
The Cannabis Unity Coalition Hosts Multi-Day Activism Event that Includes a Press Conference, Lobby Day, and White House Rally to Free Those Still Incarcerated Download Photos + Videos from the Week’s Events Tuesday, April 29th (Washington D.C.) - As Americans across the country celebrated the 4/20 cannabis holiday last week, tens of thousands of people sat in prisons incarcerated for cannabis-related offenses, licensed cannabis businesses struggled, and the federal government's cannabis reclassification process remained stalled. But this week, lawmakers and advocates are gathering on Capitol Hill to harness their movements’ momentum and enact change. Mobilizing the 70% of the public that supports legalization into political pressure, the Cannabis Unity Coalition — the largest bipartisan alliance of advocacy, industry, and grassroots organizations — is leading Cannabis Unity Week of Action this week, taking place April 29–May 1, 2025, in Washington, D.C. The multi-day event brings together advocates, impacted individuals, and industry leaders to pressure Congress and the Trump administration to fully legalize cannabis and deliver retroactive relief to those harmed by outdated prohibition-era policies. Advocates started the week today with a congressional press conference at the House Press Triangle, where they were joined by Congressional Cannabis Caucus members Congresswoman Ilhan Omar (D-Minnesota) and Congresswoman Dina Titus (D-Nevada), alongside other representatives who spoke about current legislative efforts. The press conference was followed by a welcome ceremony in the U.S. Capitol Visitor Center. “It’s a pleasure to join the Cannabis Unity Coalition on Capitol Hill to call for federal cannabis reform,” said Congresswoman Dina Titus (NV-01) . “As Co-Chair of the Cannabis Caucus, I am dedicated to working with advocates to modernize the government’s outdated approach to cannabis and ensure that common-sense legislation is advanced in Congress.” “It’s beyond time to legalize cannabis nationwide and expunge records for those incarcerated for cannabis-related offenses,” said Congresswoman Ilhan Omar (MN-05) , newly elected co-chair of the Congressional Cannabis Caucus. "I’m incredibly grateful for the partnership of the members of the Cannabis Unity Coalition and look forward to working together to get this done." As part of their 4/20 clemency campaign with LPP , members of Ben & Jerry’s advocacy team joined to help build awareness and mobilize grassroots efforts to demand clemency from governors across the country. Wednesday will be dedicated to our Lobby Day where attendees will meet with their elected officials on Capitol Hill to advocate for cannabis reform, particularly the newly reintroduced STATES 2.0 Act and PREPARE Act . Coalition partners have planned meetings with elected officials from both parties in the House and Senate including Sen. Cory Booker (D-New Jersey) , Sen. Adam Schiff (D-California) , Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Missouri), Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pennsylvania), Sen. Andy Kim (D-New Jersey), Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Massachusetts), Rep. Nancy Mace (R-South Carolina), Rep. Tom McClintock (R-California), Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Maryland) , and other offices to call for the full legalization of cannabis, the removal of criminal penalties, and retroactive relief. Events will conclude Thursday evening with a Cannabis Freedom Rally outside the White House from 4-9 p.m. to honor those still incarcerated for cannabis and demand their freedom via presidential clemency. The rally will feature previously incarcerated activists like Donte West , Kyle Page , and Deshaun Durham , who was granted cannabis clemency by Kansas Governor Laura Kelly at the end of last year. These activists will lend their voices to the actions and share their powerful stories. The Cannabis Unity Coalition is made up of a broad array of advocate groups span across political boundaries and includes Last Prisoner Project (LPP), members of the Marijuana Justice Coalition (MJC) like Drug Policy Alliance (DPA), National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), Veterans Cannabis Coalition, and Parabola Center; members of the Cannabis Freedom Alliance (CFA) like the Reason Foundation and Law Enforcement Action Partnership (LEAP); Students for Sensible Drug Policy (SSDP), which is a member of both coalitions; and industry groups like, National Craft Cannabis Coalition, National Cannabis Industry Association (NCIA), Minority Cannabis Business Association (MCBA), Indigenous Cannabis Industry Association (ICIA), Asian Cannabis Roundtable, and National Association of Black Cannabis Lawyers (NABCL); other organizaitons include Freedom Grow, Marijuana Justice, Doctors for Drug Policy Reform, United Food and Commercial Workers Union (UFCW), Supernova Women, Minorities for Medical Marijuana, DCMJ, Just Leadership USA (JLUSA), National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, National Coalition for Drug Legalization and the Marijuana Policy Project (MPP), Mission Green, Latinas in Cannabis, the Equity Trade Network, Cannademix, and Free My Weed Man. Those who can’t join us in D.C. can still participate virtually by contacting your federal representatives and asking them to #DecriminalizeNow, urging your governor to grant clemency to those in your state still incarcerated for cannabis, and following along through our livestream. Learn more and take action at LPP.la/CannabisUnityWeek . ABOUT LAST PRISONER PROJECT Last Prisoner Project is dedicated to freeing those incarcerated due to the War on Drugs, reuniting their families, and helping them rebuild their lives. As laws change, there remains a fundamental injustice for individuals whose conviction is no longer a crime. We work to repair these harms through legal intervention, constituent support, direct advocacy, and policy change. Visit www.lastprisonerproject.org or text FREEDOM to 24365 to learn more. Follow Last Prisoner Project: Instagram | LinkedIn | X/Twitter | Facebook Press contact: Stephen Post LPP Communications Manager stephen@lastprisonerproejct.org