Elizabeth Warren on Drug Decriminalization

Warren supports Marijuana legalization. Warren declined to publicly state a position when Massachusetts considered whether to legalize weed in 2016, but now says she voted in favor of the ballot measure and supports nationwide legalization. Warren has cited the racial disparities in marijuana arrests as a big reason to legalize the substance.

Warren is a lead sponsor of the proposed Strengthening the Tenth Amendment Through Entrusting States (STATES) Act, which would recognize the legalization of cannabis, including the existing U.S. state laws that have already legalized.

Warren is a co-sponsor of the Marijuana Justice Act, which would economically punish states that do not legalize cannabis and continue to incarcerate or arrest people for cannabis-related offenses.

“For four decades, we’ve subscribed to a “War on Drugs” theory of crime, which has criminalized addiction, ripped apart families — and largely failed to curb drug use. It starts with legalizing marijuana and erasing past convictions, and then eliminating the remaining disparity between crack and powder cocaine sentencing. And rather than incarcerating individuals with substance abuse disorders, we should expand options that divert them into programs that provide real treatment.”
Ending private prisons and exploitation for profit
Medium, June 21, 2019 | Elizabeth Warren

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Elizabeth Warren on Substance Use Treatment Access

Warren introduced the proposed CARE Act, which would commit $100 billion over 10 years to funding addiction treatment and harm reduction programs at the local, state, and federal levels. This would include $1.1 billion for public and nonprofit entities “on the front lines, including those working with underserved populations and workers at high risk for addiction, and to support expanded and innovative service delivery of treatment, recovery, and harm reduction services.”

Warren promises to expand the availability of buprenorphine.

“Resources would be used to support the whole continuum of care, from early intervention for those at risk for addiction, to harm reduction for those struggling with addiction, to long-term support services for those in recovery. Along with addiction treatment, the CARE Act would ensure access to mental health services and help provide critical wraparound services like housing support and medical transportation for those who need them.”
My comprehensive plan to end the opioid crisis
Medium, May 8, 2019 | Elizabeth Warren

“In talking to congressional staffers over the past few years, I’ve repeatedly heard that Republicans are very resistant to spending much more money on the opioid crisis — and at least some GOP support would be needed to pass a bill.”
How the Democratic presidential candidates would combat the opioid epidemic
Vox, September 10, 2019 | Geman Lopez

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Elizabeth Warren on Syringe Access

Warren supports syringe access and needle exchange programs.

“I’ll support evidence-based safe injection sites and needle exchanges, and expand the availability of buprenorphine to prevent overdoses.”
Ending private prisons and exploitation for profit
Medium, June 21, 2019 | Elizabeth Warren

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Bernie Sanders on Criminal Justice Reform

Sanders co-sponsored the "Recidivism Reduction and Second Chance Act of 2007

Sanders voted in favor of the 1994 crime bill authored by Joe Biden. He has since stated that this was due to specific provisions in the bill which he favored, including the Violence Against Women Act and a 10-year assault weapons ban. At the time, Sanders stated, “I have a number of serious problems with the Crime Bill, but one part of it that I vigorously support is the Violence Against Women Act. We urgently need the $1.8 billion in this bill to combat the epidemic of violence against women on the streets and in the homes of America.”

Sanders voted for an amendment to the 1994 crime bill to ban the federal death penalty.

Sanders would legalize marijuana and vacate and expunge past marijuana convictions.

Sanders would raise the threshold for when drug charges are federalized, as federal charges carry longer sentences.

Sanders would ban for-profit prisons.

Sanders would incentivize states and localities to end police departments’ reliance on fines and fees for revenue.

Sanders promises to “stop excessive sentencing with the goal of cutting the incarcerated population in half.”

Sanders would reverse the Trump administration’s guidance on the use of death penalty drugs with the goal of ending the death penalty at the state level.

Sanders would abolish the death penalty.

Sanders would end cash bail.

Sanders would end “three strikes” laws.

Sanders would expand the use of sentencing alternatives, including community supervision and publicly funded halfway houses. This includes funding state-based pilot programs to establish alternatives to incarceration, including models based on restorative justice and free access to treatment and social services.

Sanders would make expungement broadly available.

Sanders would remove legal and regulatory barriers and facilitate access to services for people returning home from jail or prison.

Sanders would create a federal agency responsible for monitoring re-entry.

Sanders would enact fair chance licensing reform to remove unfair restrictions on occupational licensure based on criminal history.

Sanders would guarantee jobs and free job training at trade schools and apprenticeship programs for people leaving jail or prison.

Sanders would decriminalize truancy for all youth and their parents.

Sanders would end solitary confinement for youth.

Sanders would fund states and municipalities to create civilian corps of unarmed first responders for low-level incidents.

Sanders would ban the prosecution of children under the age of 18 in adult courts.

Sanders would triple congressional spending on indigent defense, to $14 billion annually.

Sanders voted against the 1991 crime bill stating, “This is not a crime prevention bill. This is a punishment bill, a retribution bill, a vengeance bill.”

Sanders voted in favor of at least one amendment to the 1994 crime bill to allocate 10.5 billion more in grants to states for prison construction. The Sanders campaign has said this was in an effort to “strip out” other language which would have expanded the crimes for which individuals could be sentenced.

Sanders supported the Smarter Sentencing Act of 2014, which would have adjusted federal mandatory sentencing guidelines for a number of crimes in an effort to reduce the size of the current U.S. prison population. Namely, it would have reduced mandatory sentences for drug offenses, would have expanded the ability of non-violent offenders to reduce their sentences, and would have enabled federal prisoners to seek retroactive sentence adjustment under the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010.

Sanders would institute a full review of the current sentencing guidelines and end the sentencing disparity between crack and cocaine.

Sanders supports removing questions regarding conviction histories from job and other applications.

Sanders would minimize costs for incarcerated individuals by making prison phone calls and other communications free, and would audit the practices of commissaries.

Sanders would ensure that diversion, community supervision, or treatment programs are free.

Sanders would end mandatory sentencing minimums.

Sanders promises to improve law enforcement accountability by banning the use of facial recognition software for policing; conducting a U.S. Attorney General’s investigation whenever someone is killed in police custody; establish a federal no-call policy; mandating criminal liability for civil rights violations resulting from police misconduct; creating federal standards for the use of body cameras; providing grants for cities and states to establish civilian oversight agencies; creating a federal database of police use of deadly force; ending federal programs that provide military equipment to local police forces; rescinding former Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ guidance on consent decrees; and revitalizing the use of DOJ investigations, consent decrees, and federal lawsuits to address systemic constitutional violations by police departments.

Sanders would reinstate a federal parole system and end truth-in-sentencing. People serving long sentences will undergo a “second look” process to make sure their sentence is still appropriate.

Sanders would “invigorate and expand” the compassionate release process so that people with disabilities, the sick and elderly are transitioned out of incarceration whenever possible.

Sanders would create an independent clemency board in the White House that would be removed from the Department of Justice.

Sanders would enact a Prisoner Bill of Rights that guarantees ending solitary confinement; access to free medical care in prisons and jails, including professional and evidence-based substance abuse and trauma-informed mental health treatment; incarcerated trans people have access to all the health care they need; access to free educational and vocational training (this includes ending the ban on Pell Grants for all incarcerated people without any exceptions; living wages and safe working conditions, including maximum work hours, for all incarcerated people for their labor; the right to vote while incarcerated; ending prison gerrymandering, ensuring incarcerated people are counted in their communities, not where they are incarcerated; establishment of an Office of Prisoner Civil Rights and Civil Liberties within the Department of Justice to investigate civil rights complaints from incarcerated individuals and provide independent oversight to make sure that prisoners are housed in safe, healthy, environments; protection from sexual abuse and harassment, including mandatory federal prosecution of prison staff who engage in such misconduct; access to their families — including unlimited visits, phone calls, and video calls; and a determination for the most appropriate setting for people with disabilities and safe, accessible conditions for people with disabilities in prisons and jails.

Sanders would bar criminal charges for school-based behavior that would not otherwise be criminal.

Sanders would use Supreme Court’s Olmstead decision to challenge states that have failed to adequately support the voluntary, community-based mental health services that can divert people with mental illness from ending up in the criminal justice system.

Sanders would prevent juveniles from being housed in adult prisons.

Sanders would ban the practice of any law enforcement agency benefiting from civil asset forfeiture.

Sanders would abolish long mandatory minimum sentences and life-without-parole sentences for youth.

Sanders would mandate and fund police officer training on implicit bias, cultural competency, de-escalation, crisis intervention, adolescent development, and interacting with individuals with disabilities.

“Look, the first thing we have to recognize is that our criminal justice system is not just broken. It is deeply, deeply, deeply broken. It is a dysfunctional system, which is punishing millions of people unnecessarily.”

Then Representative Bernie Sanders while speaking on the floor of the U.S. House of Representative floor on April 13, 1994 stated, “It is my firm belief that clearly there are people in our society who are horribly violent, who are deeply sick and sociopathic, and clearly these people must be put behind bars in order to protect society from them. But it is also my view that through the neglect of our government and through a grossly irrational set of priorities, we are dooming today tens of millions of young people to a future of bitterness, misery, hopelessness, drugs, crime, and violence. And, Mr. Speaker, all the jails in the world — and we already imprison more people per capita than any other country — and all of the executions … in the world will not make that situation right… We can either educate or electrocute. We can create meaningful jobs, rebuilding our society, or we can build more jails. Mr. Speaker, let us create a society of hope and compassion, not one of hate and vengeance.”

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Bernie Sanders on Overdose Prevention Sites

Sanders would legalize safe injection sites, and would support pilot programs for supervised injection sites.

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Justice and Safety for All
Bernie Sanders campaign website, 2019

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Bernie Sanders on HIV Getting to Zero

Sanders would create an HIV/AIDS Task Force composed of people with HIV/AIDS to develop recommendations on ending the HIV epidemic.

Sanders would end HIV-specific criminalization laws.

Sanders would create a "multi-billion dollar Prize Fund" for HIV/AIDS researchers. "Essentially, a company bringing a truly innovative HIV/AIDS treatment to market would receive a cash prize instead of patent protection; the treatment would then be placed in the public domain, allowing generic versions to come onto the market quickly."

“We must set a national goal of ending the HIV epidemic in the U.S. by the year 2025 so that HIV is no longer a public health threat to any community in the U.S. and that people with HIV are able to live long, healthy lives.”

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BREAKING: 2020 Presidential Candidates Tell Us Their Plans to End HIV
HIV+Magazine, September 9, 2019 | Jacob Anderson-Minshall

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Bernie Sanders on Hepatitis C Treatment Access

Sanders supports Medicare for all.

In 2015, Senator Sanders wrote a letter to the Secretary of Veterans Affairs urging him to use federal law to to break the patents on hepatitis C drugs to authorize third parties to manufacture or import them for government use. This was after the VA stopped enrolling new HCV patients due to lack of funds for the price the medication was being marketed at.

Sanders has discussed using a statute in U.S. patent law, which allows the government to override drug patents and license the production of cheap generics if it serves the public interest, to lower costs of new hepatitis C treatments.

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The Battle of 1498
AlterNet, March 14, 2018 | Alexander Zaitchik

Letter to Secretary Robert A. McDonald
Sanders senate website, May 12, 2015

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Bernie Sanders on Voting Rights Restoration

Sanders advocates for both the restoration of voting rights for felons, and the ability for individuals to vote while incarcerated. Sanders is, so far, the only presidential candidate to explicitly support enfranchisement for incarcerated individuals.

“You’re paying a price, you committed a crime, you’re in jail. That’s bad. But you’re still living in American society and you have a right to vote. I believe in that.”

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Justice and Safety for All
Bernie Sanders campaign website, 2019

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Bernie Sanders on Drug Decriminalization

Sanders would sign an executive order within the first 100 days of office, authorizing the attorney general to declassify marijuana as a Schedule I drug.

In 1972, Sanders wrote in a letter to a local Vermont newspaper, that he supported abolishing "all laws dealing with abortion, drugs, sexual behavior (adultery, homosexuality, etc.)" while running for Governor of Vermont.

Sanders supported the Smarter Sentencing Act of 2014, which would have adjusted federal mandatory sentencing guidelines for a number of crimes in an effort to reduce the size of the current U.S. prison population. Namely, it would have reduced mandatory sentences for drug offenses, would have expanded the ability of non-violent offenders to reduce their sentences, and would have enabled federal prisoners to seek retroactive sentence adjustment under the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010.

Sanders would legalize marijuana and vacate and expunge past marijuana convictions.

Sanders co-sponsored the 2019 Marijuana Freedom and Opportunity Act, which would federally decriminalize cannabis.

Sanders sponsored the Opioid Crisis Accountability Act in 2018, which aims to establish criminal penalties for drug companies who negligently omit information about the risk of addiction in advertising, and limits the quantity of opioids that are delivered to each state.

Sanders filed the first bill in the Senate in 2015 to end cannabis prohibition.

Sanders has called the War on Drugs, "a costly, destructive, and ineffective" policy

Sanders co-sponsored the 2017 Marijuana Justice Act, which aimed to deschedule marijuana as a Schedule I drug.

Sanders promises to end the War on Drugs.

Sanders would institute a full review of the current sentencing guidelines and end the sentencing disparity between crack and cocaine.

Sanders co-sponsored the States' Rights to Medical Marijana Act of 2001, which would have turned marijuana into a Schedule ll substance.

“What I can tell you is this: We have far, far, far too many people in jail for nonviolent crimes, and I think in many ways, the war against drugs has not been successful.”

“Once you’re into heroin, it’s either jail or death”

“The fact that marijuana is classified next to cocaine or heroin under federal law is absolutely ridiculous. We need to legalize marijuana in this country and furthermore, expunge any criminal records pertaining to the use of marijuana.”

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Bernie Sanders on Substance Use Treatment Access

Sanders voted yes on a 2000 U.S. Congress appropriations bill which would have increased funding for substance use treatment alternatives to incarceration.

Sanders sponsored the Community Health Centers and Primary Care Workforce Expansion Act of 2019, which would expand and improve community health centers in both rural and urban areas, in part, to address the needs of individuals impacted by drug use.

Sanders would guarantee access to free medical care in prisons and jails, including professional and evidence-based substance abuse and trauma-informed mental health treatment.

Sanders would provide people with addiction free inpatient and outpatient substance use and mental health services with no copayments or deductibles through a Medicare-for-all, single-payer program.

Sanders voted in support of the 2018 SUPPORT for Patients and Communities Act, which would create treatment and recovery programs and fund laboratories to detect imported synthetic drugs, such as fentanyl.

Sanders co-sponsored the Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act (CARA) of 2016.

Sanders co-sponsored the Comprehensive Addiction Resources Emergency (CARE) Act of 2019 which would commit $100 billion over 10 years to funding addiction treatment and harm reduction programs at the local, state, and federal levels.

Sanders would decriminalize possession of buprenorphine.

Solving the opioid epidemic is not a simple thing. We must make sure people have access to treatment, so they can get help where and when they need it. We must invest in what people need for a successful long-term recovery, like counseling and peer support, employment, and housing. And it means taking a hard look at the issues in our society that are causing so many people to turn to drugs in the first place, so that we can prevent others from becoming addicted.”

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Justice and Safety for All
Bernie Sanders campaign website, 2019

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