Yanet Amanuel is a Black woman in the center of the phoot. She has long braids and is wearing a bright red short-sleeved shirt.

Yanet Amanuel

Public Policy Director

Dana Vickers Shelley is inside of a school library and holding a sign that says, "I read banned books." She is holding a copy of The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison. Dana has short gray and black hair, is wearing cat-eye glasses and earings, and is smiling.

Dana Vickers Shelley

Executive Director

She/Her/They/Them

Send a message to your Maryland legislators to tell them to end police stops and searches based on the alleged smell of marijuana.

Take Action


Originally published in Maryland Matters on March 15, 2023:

“The Nixon campaign in 1968, and the Nixon White House after that, had two enemies: the antiwar left and Black people. You understand what I’m saying? We knew we couldn’t make it illegal to be either against the war or Black, but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and Blacks with heroin, and then criminalizing both heavily, we could disrupt those communities. We could arrest their leaders, raid their homes, break up their meetings, and vilify them night after night on the evening news. Did we know we were lying about the drugs? Of course we did.” — John Ehrlichman, Nixon’s former aide.

This intentional smear framing and more than 50 years of propaganda spewed by the media and politicians has not only allowed law enforcement to unfairly target and criminalize Black people, but it has also seeped deep into our subconscious: the idea that Black people are inherently criminal. Understanding this, we must be intentional about unlearning and rejecting this notion.

As of July 1, 2023, marijuana will be legal in Maryland. There is no reason why the odor of a legal substance should continue to be used as a tool by law enforcement to stop and search people, especially when police have disproportionately stopped and searched Black and Brown people. Allowing police to continue to do so not only promotes lazy policing but is rooted in the subconscious or conscious belief that Black people are inherently criminal.

The war on drugs has always really been a war on Black people. For decades, the alleged odor of marijuana has been used as an excuse to justify racial profiling and perform warrantless stops and searches. Associations between Black people and marijuana frame Black people as inherently criminal or bad. In contrast, white people and marijuana is framed as recreational or medicinal.

Read the full article here

Related Content

News & Commentary
Feb 02, 2022
Marijuana leaf with a dark and light green photoshop treatment on it to look like there are lines through it.
  • Legal Justice System|
  • +2 Issues

A War on Marijuana, or a War on Black Communities?

How Maryland’s legal issue with marijuana enabled white supremacy and what we must do about it.
News & Commentary
Nov 09, 2022
Yellow background with a Black or Brown person's hand holding a green marijuana leaf.
  • Racial Justice|
  • +2 Issues

The Road to Marijuana Legalization: Timeline So Far

What do you need to know now that it seems clear legal recreational marijuana is coming to Maryland?
News & Commentary
Nov 09, 2022
Yellow background with a Black or Brown person's hand holding a green marijuana leaf.
  • Racial Justice|
  • +2 Issues

EL CAMINO HACIA LA LEGALIZACIÓN DE MARIHUANA: EL CRONOGRAMA HASTA AHORA

¿Qué necesita saber ahora que parece claro que la marihuana recreativa legal llegará a Maryland?
Know Your Rights
Nov 09, 2022
Yellow background with a Black or Brown person's hand holding a green marijuana leaf.
  • Racial Justice|
  • +2 Issues

Marijuana Legalization in Maryland

Recreational marijuana is legal in Maryland as of July 1, 2023. Know your rights.