HR-1924-117
Ordered to be Reported (Amended) by the Yeas and Nays: 28 - 7.
Sponsored by Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY)
What it does
This bill would expand who can apply to have their criminal record cleared (expunged) for a first-time drug possession offense. Under current federal law, only people who committed the offense before age 21 are eligible for expungement. This bill would remove the age limit entirely, making people of any age eligible to apply for expungement of a qualifying first-time drug possession record.
Who benefits
Adults who were convicted of a first-time federal drug possession offense at age 21 or older and have no prior expungement eligibility under current law. This would disproportionately include middle-aged and older adults who were convicted decades ago, as well as racial and ethnic minority groups who research shows are arrested and convicted for drug possession at higher rates relative to their share of the population. Employers and landlords who voluntarily prefer hiring or renting to individuals without criminal records may also indirectly benefit from a larger pool of applicants with cleared records.
Who is hurt
Employers, licensing boards, and background-check users who rely on complete criminal history records to make hiring, licensing, or contracting decisions would have access to less information. Victims of crimes connected to drug offenses may object to the erasure of those records. Law enforcement agencies that use prior criminal history data for investigative or sentencing purposes would have reduced access to that history for individuals whose records are expunged.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that a single drug possession conviction — especially one from years or decades ago — should not permanently bar someone from employment, housing, professional licensing, or civic participation. They contend that expungement does not erase accountability but rather allows people who have already served their sentence to fully reintegrate into society. They argue the current age-21 cutoff is arbitrary, since a 22-year-old first-time offender faces the same barriers as a 20-year-old but receives no path to relief. Supporters also argue that drug possession convictions fall disproportionately on lower-income individuals and racial minorities, and that expanding expungement is a step toward addressing those disparities without requiring proof of systemic bias in any individual case.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that expungement conceals factually accurate criminal history information from employers, landlords, and licensing bodies that have a legitimate interest in making fully informed decisions. They contend that Congress already drew a reasonable line at age 21, reflecting a judgment that youthful offenders deserve a second chance more than adults who made the same choice with greater maturity. Opponents may also argue that expanding expungement reduces the deterrent effect of drug possession laws, and that relief for older offenders is better handled through pardons or clemency — processes that involve executive review — rather than automatic eligibility. Some may further argue that the bill does not distinguish between offenses involving small personal-use quantities and those near the threshold of distribution, potentially benefiting individuals whose conduct was more serious than simple possession.