US: Drug-Linked Deportations Soar

Human Rights Watch and the Drug Policy Alliance reports that thousands of noncitizens in the United States are being deported for drug offenses that in many cases no longer exist under state laws, harming and separating immigrant families. The report, “Disrupt and Vilify,” shows that the failure to reform harsh federal immigration law has resulted in enormous numbers of deportations, splitting families apart, disrupting communities, and destabilizing people well-established in the US. For example, federal immigration law that treats some types of marijuana use as a deportable offense is at odds with many states’ recreational marijuana laws, penalizing immigrants and non-citizens for activities that are legal for citizens at the state level. The groups found that 500,000 people whose most serious offense was for drugs were deported between 2002 and 2020.