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18 Ohio St. J. Crim. L. 169 (2020-2021)
Goodbye Marijuana Schedule I - Welcome to a Post-Legalization World

handle is hein.journals/osjcl18 and id is 177 raw text is: Goodbye Marijuana Schedule I-Welcome to a Post-
Legalization World
Melanie Reid*
ABSTRACT
Marijuana has been a Schedule I controlled substance under the
Controlled Substances Act (CSA) for fifty years. However, the tide has
turned, thirty-three states and Washington D.C. have legalized marijuana
for either recreational and/or medical use, and it is likely that marijuana
will eventually be removed as a Schedule I drug and become legal at the
federal level as well. During this transition phase, it is important to reflect
on how the criminalization of marijuana under the CSA has impacted the
U.S. criminal justice system and the criminal procedure case law that
followed. This article will examine the impact criminalizing marijuana has
had on criminal procedure and how criminalizing possession,
manufacturing, and distributing marijuana provided law enforcement with
ever-expanding tools to detain, search, and arrest criminal defendants.
Rarely has a controlled substance had such an impact on investigative
tools-from trespassing to search for marijuana plants in fields,
surveilling marijuana grows in the area, smelling (by humans) and
sniffing (by dogs) for weed at traffic stops, to expanding the probable
.cause to arrest a particular defendant, marijuana has had quite an impact
on the expansion of criminal procedure during the War on Drugs. There
are several lessons to be learned from this failed 50-plus year
criminalization experiment, and those failures and successes should be
identified in order to make better scheduling choices in the future. After
such reflections, this article will examine what life will be like in a readily
available, post-legalization marijuana world. While simple possession of
marijuana may become legal, the federal government will still have its
hand in its regulation and taxation. Law enforcement's ability to arrest,
search, and forfeit drug-related assets may be limited but not to as great
an extent as one might think. Due to heavy regulation, law enforcement
will still be using its tools to identify marijuana-related crime, such as
violations of driving while intoxicated, open container laws, public
* Professor of Law, Lincoln Memorial University-Duncan School of Law. I would like to thank
Charlie Collins and Allison Tomey for their invaluable research assistance and Brian Owsley for his
editorial comments. I would also like to thank the panelists and audience members at the Controlled
Substances Act at 50 Years Conference, especially Alex Kreit and David Kramer, for all their
comments and advice.

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