Current:Home > Finance100,000 marijuana convictions expunged in Missouri, year after recreational use legalized-VaTradeCoin
100,000 marijuana convictions expunged in Missouri, year after recreational use legalized
View Date:2025-01-07 13:57:30
Missouri expunged nearly 100,000 marijuana convictions from government records, a year after legalizing recreational use, KMBC reported.
Last year, a constitutional amendment promised to expunge non-violent misdemeanors by June 8 and felonies by December 8. When a record is expunged it's either sealed or destroyed. The individual charged is cleared of those charges.
“If they have that scarlet letter or that mark on their record, it puts them out of opportunities that they can get for safer housing, for better employment, for education opportunities,” Justice Gatson, leader of the Kansas City advocacy group Reale Justice Network told Missouri Independent, when the law passed last December.
More:Ohio legalizes marijuana, joining nearly half the US: See the states where weed is legal
The responsibility to wipe those records fell on to county Circuit Clerks across the state but in May, several told FOX4 they couldn't make that deadline. Employees in each county would have to go through every case file to see if there are records that need to be expunged.
“We cannot meet that deadline, will not meet that deadline, it is not physically possible to meet that deadline,” Greene County Circuit Clerk Bryan Feemster told FOX4. “We wish that we could.”
While the courts appears to still be behind on expunging those records, advocates told KMBC, they're fine as long as they continue to make "good faith" efforts to wipe out those convictions.
“We have always said that as long as the courts, the circuit clerks in particular, are making a good faith effort to comply with the law, to get those cases expunged, that we'll be satisfied. They have not technically met the deadline. But on the other hand, we're dealing with a century of marijuana prohibition in Missouri. So, there are hundreds of thousands of cases,” Dan Viets, who wrote parts of the constitutional amendment told KMBC.
Viets said he anticipates expunging all the records could take years.
More:As Congress freezes, states take action on abortion rights, marijuana legalization and other top priorities
Which states have legal recreational marijuana?
Here are the states where it is currently legal, or will soon become legal, to purchase marijuana for recreational use. Every state on this list had authorized the use for medicinal purposes prior to full legalization.
- Ohio: Legalized in 2023
- Minnesota: Legalized in 2023
- Delaware: Legalized in 2023
- Rhode Island: Legalized in 2022
- Maryland: Legalized in 2022
- Missouri: Legalized in 2022
- Connecticut: Legalized in 2021
- New Mexico: Legalized in 2021
- New York: Legalized in 2021
- Virginia: Legalized in 2021
- Arizona: Legalized in 2020
- Montana: Legalized in 2020
- New Jersey: Legalized in 2020
- Vermont: Legalized in 2020
- Illinois: Legalized in 2019
- Michigan: Legalized in 2018
- California: Legalized in 2016
- Maine: Legalized in 2016
- Massachusetts: Legalized in 2016
- Nevada: Legalized in 2016
- District of Columbia: Legalized in 2014
- Alaska: Legalized 2014
- Oregon: Legalized in 2014
- Colorado: Legalized in 2012
- Washington: Legalized in 2012
veryGood! (11)
Related
- Wildfire map: Thousands of acres burn near New Jersey-New York border; 1 firefighter dead
- Environmental groups urge regulators to shut down California reactor over safety, testing concerns
- Missing plane found in southern Michigan with pilot dead at crash site
- Week 3 college football schedule features five unheralded teams that you should watch
- See Chris Evans' Wife Alba Baptista Show Her Sweet Support at Red One Premiere
- Kim Davis, Kentucky County Clerk who denied gay couple marriage license, must pay them $100,000
- Mexico on track to break asylum application record
- 'Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom' trailer released: Here are other DC projects in the works
- Why Dolly Parton Is a Fan of Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce's Little Love Affair
- A cash-for visas scandal hits Poland’s strongly anti-migration government, weeks before elections
Ranking
- Digital Finance Research Institute Introduce
- Ohio attorney general rejects language for political mapmaking reform amendment for a second time
- Why Demi Lovato Felt She Was in Walking Coma Years After Her Near-Fatal 2018 Overdose
- UFO briefing takeaways: How NASA hopes to shift UAP talks 'from sensationalism to science'
- NYC bans unusual practice of forcing tenants to pay real estate brokers hired by landlords
- Jalen Hurts runs for 2 TDs, throws for a score; Eagles hold off fumble-prone Vikings 34-28
- In a court filing, a Tennessee couple fights allegations that they got rich off Michael Oher
- Pope’s Ukraine peace envoy raises stalled Black Sea grain exports in Beijing talks
Recommendation
-
The Daily Money: Mattel's 'Wicked' mistake
-
Sean Penn goes after studio execs' 'daughter' in bizarre comments over AI debate
-
A cash-for visas scandal hits Poland’s strongly anti-migration government, weeks before elections
-
Boston Red Sox fire chief baseball officer Chaim Bloom, 'signals a new direction'
-
Deommodore Lenoir contract details: 49ers ink DB to $92 million extension
-
Alex Murdaugh makes his first appearance in court since his murder trial
-
Indiana man charged with child neglect after 2-year-old finds gun on bed and shoots him in the back
-
Imagine making shadowy data brokers erase your personal info. Californians may soon live the dream