Amy Klobuchar on Criminal Justice Reform

Klobuchar would create a position in the White House that exists outside of the Department of Justice to advise the president on criminal justice reform issues.

Klobuchar would create a bipartisan clemency advisory board that would include victim advocates and prison and sentencing reform advocates to investigate and review requests for clemency.

As a prosecutor in Hennepin County, Klobuchar pursued harsher penalties for repeat offenses, including drunk driving, failure to pay child support, and more.

Klobuchar will direct the Department of Justice to decline to renew or reduce the scope of contracts for private prisons when the contract reaches its end, aiming to phase out the use of private prisons.

Klobuchar previously served as a prosecutor for Hennepin County in Minnesota.

When data showed that a local drug court in Hennepin County was sentencing many drug offenders to probation instead of prison, Klobuchar called the results “unacceptable,” adding, “We believe that they should serve a lengthier sentence instead of going to the workhouse and that they should be behind bars.” Klobuchar was a prosecutor in Hennepin County at the time.
Prosecutors criticize Drug Court
Star Tribune, July 13, 2006

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Amy Klobuchar on HIV Getting to Zero

Klobuchar has not yet completed a survey about HIV policy issued by AIDS United
2020 Presidential Candidate HIV Questionnaire
AIDS United, 2019

Klobuchar supports increasing competition and regulation of pharmaceutical companies in order to improve the availability of affordable HIV medications.

Klobuchar supported increased funding for Housing Opportunities for Persons with HIV/AIDS as Senator for Minnesota.

Klobuchar pledges that within the first 100 days of her presidency, she will allow for the safe importation of prescription drugs from other countries to decrease drug costs and would crack down on drug companies that pay makers of generic drugs to delay cheaper versions from getting into the market.

My solutions are these: first of all, make sure that [the] HIV community can get the drugs that they need, and that means the PrEP drug, and that means a whole bunch of other things to take on pharmaceutical companies to make drugs more affordable, including PrEP. The second thing is to make sure we keep in place the protections of the Affordable Care Act so we don’t kick people off their insurance for pre-existing conditions… The third thing that I would do is look to general social issues like homelessness, and things we need to do a much better job of… And finally, it’s the stigma issue.”
Klobuchar calls out big pharma to lower HIV drug costs
CNN, October 11, 2019 | Don Lemon

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Amy Klobuchar on Hepatitis C Treatment Access

The Senate Finance Committee released a report in 2015 which revealed that the hepatitis C drug ‘Solvadi’ was being priced and marketed to maximize profits for a pharmaceutical company, and was at the expense of consumers. In response to this report, Klobuchar called on Congress to act immediately to pass legislation to lower prescription drug prices for consumers.

“It is as clear as ever: we have an urgent problem with the cost of prescription drugs in our country. This report presents yet another example in which a drug manufacturer’s first priority is how much money it can squeeze from consumers with no regard for what it means for the Americans who need its treatment. This is an alarming trend that we cannot allow to continue. We need to pass legislation to protect consumers from the unjustified inflation of prescription drug prices.”

In Light of New Report on Profit-Driven Prescription Drug Pricing, Klobuchar Continues Call for Congress to Immediately Pass Her Legislation to Lower Drug Prices for Consumers
Amy Klobuchar senate website, December 1, 2015

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Amy Klobuchar on Voting Rights Restoration

Klobuchar supports restoring voting rights to felons after release from prison.

Klobuchar reported she supported “what they did in Florida, which is when [felons] get out they get to vote.”
Candidates Are Really Hesitant About Allowing Prisoners To Vote
Huffpost.com, April 10, 2019 | Sam Levine and Igor Bobic

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Candidates Are Really Hesitant About Allowing Prisoners To Vote
Huffpost.com, April 10, 2019 | Sam Levine and Igor Bobic

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Amy Klobuchar on Drug Decriminalization

Klobuchar would require prescribers to use the prescription drug monitoring program.

Klobuchar would create a position in the White House that exists outside of the Department of Justice to advise the president on criminal justice reform issues.

Klobuchar would create a bipartisan clemency advisory board that would include victim advocates and prison and sentencing reform advocates to advise the president.

Klobuchar is a co-sponsor of the Strengthening the Tenth Amendment Through Entrusting States (STATES) Act, which would amend the Controlled Substance Act to exempt states that have legalized cannabis from federal intervention.

Klobuchar is one of eight senators who signed a letter addressed to then Attorney General Jeff Sessions, demanding answers about the status of applications to become federally authorized marijuana manufacturers for research purposes.

When data showed that a local drug court in Hennepin County was sentencing many drug offenders to probation instead of prison, Klobuchar called the results “unacceptable,” adding, “We believe that they should serve a lengthier sentence instead of going to the workhouse and that they should be behind bars.” Klobuchar was a prosecutor in Hennepin County at the time.
Prosecutors criticize Drug Court
Star Tribune, July 13, 2006

Klobuchar supports incentives for state governments to enact ignition interlock laws for those convicted of drunk driving. These laws often also impact individuals convicted of substance use related charges, including those that do not involve a driving incident.

Klobuchar is a co-sponsor of the First Step Act, to reduce federal sentences for non-violent drug offenders.

Klobuchar signed on to measures designed to expand research into marijuana by increasing the number of facilities permitted to cultivate cannabis for research purposes and require relevant federal agencies to reassess whether cannabidiol (CBD) should remain a controlled substance. Another proposal she cosponsored would remove CBD and “CBD-rich plants” from the definition of marijuana under federal law.

Klobuchar has not signed onto the far-reaching Marijuana Justice Act that Sen. Cory Booker filed to deschedule cannabis and withhold funding from states with discriminatory enforcement.

Her Senate website contains just one mention of marijuana policy: “Finally, I have opposed efforts to roll back the Obama Administration policy that the federal government would not interfere with state laws legalizing marijuana, and I cosponsored the STATES Act, bipartisan legislation introduced by Senators Elizabeth Warren and Cory Gardner to protect the ability of states to regulate marijuana,” she said. “I have also cosponsored legislation to make it easier for researchers to study the medical effectiveness and safety of marijuana and cannabidiol, which is used to treat conditions such as epilepsy.”

“I support the legalization of marijuana and believe that states should have the right to determine the best approach to marijuana within their borders.”
Amy Klobuchar says she supports legalizing marijuana
CNN, February 22, 2019 | Dan Merica and Sophie Tatum

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Amy Klobuchar on Substance Use Treatment Access

Klobuchar’s proposes $100 billion to combat drug and alcohol addiction and to improve mental health care. Klobuchar references her dad, who is in recovery from long-term alcohol

Klobuchar would increase funding for addiction and mental health programs, and would increase the number of beds in mental health and substance use treatment centers, especially in rural areas, and especially in areas hit hardest by the overdose crisis.

Klobuchar would expand Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinics and treatment facilities.

Klobuchar would more strictly enforce the requirement of the Affordable Care Act that insurers cover mental health care.

Klobuchar will “make a major investment” into research and development of pain management alternatives to opioids.

Klobuchar would permanently repeal Medicaid’s “IMD Exclusion,” which prohibits Medicaid reimbursements for those receiving mental health or substance use care in facilities with more than 16 beds.

Klobuchar plan to address substance use includes funding for mental health programs at schools, as well, training for healthcare providers to recognize early warning signs of addiction and other mental health conditions, and school and community drug early-intervention programs.

Klobuchar would support public and nonprofit entities dealing in substance use treatment.

Klobuchar would increase funding for early intervention and treatment programs for drugs including cocaine and methamphetamine.

Klobuchar would increase the numbers of job training programs, transitional housing programs, and other social services for individuals in recovery.

Klobuchar will work to improve the unused prescription disposal options. In 2010, Klobuchar led the passage of the first major expansion of federal drug take-back programs with the National Prescription Drug Take-Back Day campaign.

“I want other people to be pursued by grace. I want them to have the ability to get through this [addiction], and sometimes you can’t get through it the first time, and that includes people who are addicted to very difficult substances to get through – opioids, heroin now, that is out there more and more than we ever could have imagined, what we’re seeing with meth. Those are drugs that people are affected by in every community in this country.”
Klobuchar releases plan to treat substance abuse, mental illness
NBC News, May 3, 2019 | Ali Vitali and Kailani Koenig

“I think every American should have that right to be pursued by grace. That means enough beds in this country for people with mental health problems if they’re facing a crisis. That means doing something about our mounting suicide rate – for farmers, for veterans, for LGBTQ youth – and that means instead of just talking about this, actually putting the money into treatment. I have a proposal that’s paid for by yes, two cents per milligram fee on these opioid pharma companies that have made tons of money off the backs of people who got addicted, and you can use that money for not just opioids, you can also use it for these other drugs, as well as mental health. It means making sure on the road to recovery, you’ve got a job and you’ve got a place to live, and there are so many people in this country that are crying out for help.”
Klobuchar on new plan to address addiction, mental health
CNN, July 30, 2019 | Jake Tapper

“Well, the first thing I did would probably be our bigger bulk of cases was in drug court. We had very successful and have a very successful drug court, and that really is that second chance idea. That’s the idea that, yes, you could be facing jail time or prison time but its hung over your head, so you have a community, and you have treatment that helps you get through it, because we don’t like to see repeat customers in the criminal justice system. We like them to go out of the criminal justice system.”

Klobuchar releases plan to treat substance abuse, mental illness
NBC News, May 3, 2019 | Ali Vitali and Kailani Koenig

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Amy Klobuchar Proposes $100 Billion for Addiction and Mental Health
The New York Times, May 3, 2019 | Maggie Astor

Amy’s Plan to Combat Addiction and Prioritize Mental Health
Medium, May 3, 2019 | Amy for America

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Amy Klobuchar on Naloxone

Klobuchar signed onto 2017 letter to President Trump, asking him to follow the recommendations of his Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and the Opioid Crisis and allow the government to negotiate lower prices for naloxone.

In December, 2018, Minnesota Senators Amy Klobuchar and Tina Smith sent a letter to the U.S. Department of Human Services asking them to take action to reduce the price of naloxone. 15 additional senators signed on.

“Of course this drug saves lives. We all know that. What they are forgetting to say is how they are making a ton of money over how they classified this product. They basically found a loophole and exploited it and that is just what happened with EpiPen. So it is our job to close the loophole.”
Minnesota Senators push to lower cost of Naloxone to help fight opioid epidemic
Klobuchar.senate.gov, December 7, 2018 | Leah Mclean

From the 2018 letter to the HHS director, sent by 17 senators: “No police officer, no firefighter, no public health provider, and no person should be unable to save a life because of the high price,” the lawmakers wrote.“By bringing down the cost, we can get this life-saving drug in the hands of more people as called for by the Surgeon General. Doing so will save countless lives.”

Klobuchar, Smith, Senators Call on Administration to Take Immediate Action to Reduce Price of Naloxone, a Life-Saving Opioid Overdose Reversal Drug
Klobuchar Senate Website, April 30, 2018

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