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  4. The FBI doesn’t know how many marijuana arrests were made in 2021—and it’s their own damn fault
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Politics

The FBI doesn’t know how many marijuana arrests were made in 2021—and it’s their own damn fault

Max Savage LevensonLast updated October 5, 2022
photo-illustration-of-FBI-agent
You can glare at them all you want—those numbers in the annual FBI crime report aren't going to make any sense. (AdobeStock)

Earlier today, October 5, the FBI released its annual 2021 Crime in the Nation Report, which aims to give lawmakers and citizens alike an accurate picture of arrest data throughout the country.

But this year the numbers look anything but clear. 

That’s because 2021 marked the first year that the agency switched fully from its longtime data collecting system—the Uniform Crime Report—to the brand-new National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS).

Unfortunately, according to CNN’s Priya Krishnakumar, NIBRS “requires greater detail (and effort) in logging crimes, which the FBI said has lowered participation rates.”

As a result, agencies representing more than a third of the country’s population—including NYPD and LAPD—didn’t provide all of their data. Only one half of agencies provided a full year’s worth of the numbers.

As a result, Krishnakumar noted, “the 2021 report relies heavily on estimates for their national figures.”

Local cops just have stopped sending their data to the FBI

The annual FBI data set has typically offered some insight into national marijuana arrest trends. But not this year. 

“At a time when voters and their elected officials nationwide are re-evaluating state and federal marijuana policies, it is inconceivable that government agencies are unable to produce any explicit data on the estimated costs and scope of marijuana prohibition in America,” NORML Deputy Director Paul Armentano said in a statement issued earlier today.

“Nonetheless, it remains clear from the limited data available that marijuana seizures and prosecutions remain the primary driver of drug war enforcement in the United States and that hundreds of thousands of Americans still continue to be arrested annually for these violations despite the reality that a majority of voters no longer believe that the adult-use of marijuana should be a crime,” Armentano added.

Gleaning some kind of value from the data

Despite the mess they were handed, we want to tip our hats to Armentano’s colleagues at NORML, who crunched the numbers—albeit, an utterly incomplete set of them—to draw some notable conclusions about drug-related arrests in the United States last year:

  • Law enforcement seized cannabis and hashish just over 400,000 times last year—45% of all drug seizures.
  • That made cannabis the most commonly seized drug in the US in 2021.
  • Police made at least 170,856 marijuana-related arrests in 2021. NORML suspects the actual number is much higher.
  • Texas led the nation for the most marijuana-related enforcement and arrests.

Despite the chaotic nature of the data, we can nonetheless conclude that arrest rates for cannabis continue to generally drop across the United States, since reaching a peak of over 800,000 arrests in 2008. As Leafly reported, arrest rates plummeted an astonishing 36% in 2020 alone.

Let’s hope that trajectory continues, and that next year, we can all have more faith in the numbers.

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Max Savage Levenson
Max Savage Levenson
Max Savage Levenson likely has the lowest cannabis tolerance of any writer on the cannabis beat. He also writes about music for Pitchfork, Bandcamp and other bespectacled folk. He co-hosts The Hash podcast. His dream interview is Tyler the Creator.
View Max Savage Levenson's articles

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