The U.S. will allow states to continue their experiments with legalized marijuana—as long as they enact “strict regulatory schemes” that adhere to federal priorities such as keeping the drug out of the hands of kids, the Justice Department said Thursday.
The Obama administration’s new stance does not change the federal classification of marijuana as an illegal drug but does free up the nearly two dozen states that have recently made small amounts of marijuana legal for medicinal purposes, or, in Washington and Colorado, for recreational purposes to move forward with their local laws.
“These schemes must be tough in practice, not just on paper, and include strong, state-based enforcement efforts, backed by adequate funding,” Deputy Attorney General James Cole wrote in a memo to US Attorneys. “[I]f any of the stated harms do materialize—either despite a strict regulatory scheme or because of the lack of one—federal prosecutors will act aggressively to bring individual prosecutions focused on federal enforcement priorities and the Department may challenge the regulatory scheme themselves in these states.”
The memo provides guidance for federal prosecutors, setting eight specific enforcement priorities for them to follow, which double as “harms” states need to avoid if the wish to prevent federal interference with state marijuana laws. While those priorities apply to US attorneys nationwide, they will have the biggest impact in states where some form of marijuana production and use is legal under state law.
Earlier this month, Attorney General Eric Holder said that that federal prosecutors would stop seeking harsh mandatory minimum sentences for low-level drug crimes, a policy which helped put record numbers of people behind bars.









