What's new

Calif. pot dispensaries told by feds to shut down

Grow Tech

I've got a stalk of sinsemilla growing in my back
Veteran
:spanky:
The Feds are looking for new and creative ways to thump
(from signonsandiego.com)

Feds to target newspapers, radio for marijuana ads
Story by

Michael Montgomery

Federal prosecutors are preparing to target newspapers, radio stations and other media outlets that advertise medical marijuana dispensaries in California, another escalation in the Obama administration's newly invigorated war against the state's pot industry.

This month, U.S. attorneys representing four districts in California announced that the government would single out landlords and property owners who rent buildings or land where dispensaries sell or cultivators grow marijuana.

U.S. Attorney Laura E. Duffy, whose district includes Imperial and San Diego counties, said marijuana advertising is the next area she's "going to be moving onto as part of the enforcement efforts in Southern California." Duffy said she could not speak for the three other U.S. attorneys covering the state, but noted their efforts have been coordinated so far.

"I'm not just seeing print advertising," Duffy said in an interview with California Watch and KQED. "I'm actually hearing radio and seeing TV advertising. It's gone mainstream. Not only is it inappropriate – one has to wonder want kind of message we're sending to our children – it's against the law."

Federal law prohibits people from placing ads for illegal drugs, including marijuana, in "any newspaper, magazine, handbill or other publication." The law could conceivably extend to online ads; the U.S. Department of Justice recently reached a $500 million settlement with Google for selling illegal ads linking to online Canadian pharmacies.

Duffy said her effort against TV, radio or print outlets would first include "going after these folks with ... notification that they are in violation of federal law." She noted that she also has the power to seize property or prosecute in civil and criminal court.

William G. Panzer, an attorney who specializes in marijuana defense cases, said publishers may have a reason to worry. Federal law singles out anyone who "places" an illegal ad in a newspaper or publication. Nevertheless, Panzer said he is not aware of a single appellate case dealing with this section of the law.

"Technically, if I'm running the newspaper and somebody gives me money and says, 'Here's the ad,' I'm the one who is physically putting the ad in my newspaper," he said. "I think this could be brought against the actual newspaper. Certainly, it's arguable, but the statute is not entirely clear on that."

Panzer said the penalty for a first offense is a maximum four years in prison and eight years for someone with a prior felony conviction.

In the federal law, an exception is made for ads that advocate the use of illegal drugs but don't explicitly offer them for sale or distribution. Newspapers, Panzer said, could argue that they have a right under the First Amendment to run the ads, and any "prior restraint" before publication is itself illegal.

Duffy said she believes the law gives her the right to prosecute newspaper publishers or TV station owners.

"If I own a newspaper ... or I own a TV station, and I'm going to take in your money to place these ads, I'm the person who is placing these ads," Duffy said. "I am willing to read (the law) expansively and if a court wants to more narrowly define it, that would be up to the court."

Seven states, including California, allow for medical marijuana to be distributed in dispensaries, though more than 200 California cities and nearly two dozen counties have bans or moratoriums in place on storefront pot businesses. The industry has otherwise exploded in recent years, including a marked increase in delivery services.

Ngaio Bealum, publisher of West Coast Cannabis, described as "the Sunset magazine of weed," said he receives a significant portion of his revenue from dispensary ads, though he has tough competition for ad revenue from alternative newspapers and even The Sacramento Bee, which began running print advertisements for dispensaries this year.

Bealum said it was "misguided for the Department of Justice to come after people who are following state law and doing well for the economy in a recession." He disputed the notion that marijuana ads target children.

"We're just in doctor's offices and cannabis collectives, where you have to be 18 years old or where you have to be a patient," he said. "We're not targeting anyone but cannabis patients."

Duffy said Proposition 215, also known as the Compassionate Use Act, passed by California voters in 1996 has transformed from an effort to supply marijuana to sick people through nonprofit groups into entirely a profit-making industry. She said the advertising is part of that – and "it's illegal."

Duffy said she's seen marijuana stores advertise coupons, bring-a-friend deals, extra samples for buying a certain amount of marijuana, magazines devoted entirely to the industry, T-shirts for sale, marijuana linked to video games – all things, she said, "in large part directed at our youth and children."

"The good intentions behind that law," she said, "have almost completely been taken over by people who are trying to use that permission law to get rich, to distribute marijuana and traffic drugs to people who aren't sick, to our youth and to people who are using drugs on a recreational basis."

It's clear that alternative newspapers throughout the state have benefited from the increased business, even as other advertising sources have dwindled.

In April, the Sacramento News & Review published a special supplement devoted exclusively to marijuana dispensaries. "This year’s edition includes more than 100 regional medical-cannabis dispensaries, physicians, and med-delivery and hydroponics shops for the 2011 Green Pages," the newspaper wrote. The ads, which have in the past cost $2,000 for a full page, allowed the News & Review to hire additional reporters.

"I don’t see how the News & Review running medical-marijuana ads is any different from TV stations running massive amounts of commercials for pharmaceutical companies selling drugs," Jeff vonKaenel, CEO and majority owner of the News & Review, wrote in a May 2010 column about the advertising.

Panzer said he doesn't think the federal government can effectively shut down the marijuana industry, even if it makes short-term gains by targeting high-profile dispensaries and newspapers. Given the government's lack of resources and the huge size of the marijuana industry, Panzer said officials' efforts are "a losing proposition."

"The government is trying to put the genie back in the bottle," Panzer said.

Circumventing the law on advertising the sale of illegal drugs can bring expensive consequences. In August, Google agreed to pay a $500 million settlement for accepting illegal advertisements from online Canadian pharmacies. Employees of the company had been working with pharmacies to bypass Google's own internal controls, even as Google executives testified before Congress, claiming the company had clamped down on the illegal ads.

The fine was one of the largest ever from a U.S. company. At the time of the settlement, Google said in a statement that "it's obvious with hindsight that we shouldn't have allowed these ads on Google in the first place."
 

huligun

Professor Organic Psychology
Veteran
Great contribution grow tech. It illustrates the way that a fed agency goes after a cause with the use of fear. See the fed fears the media. If a media outlet can grow and prosper in uncertain economic times it can shift a causes momentum. By scaring the media and landlords it is using a tactic employed by Afolf Hitler and Joseff Stalin. It is clearly the act of desparation however. They are desperate to not let momentum shift.
 

Duplicate

Member
U.S. Attorney Laura E. Duffy said:
...Not only is it inappropriate – one has to wonder want kind of message we're sending to our children – it's against the law."
I think Einstein had some good thoughts on it.
Albert Einstein said:
"The prestige of government has undoubtedly been lowered considerably by the Prohibition law. For nothing is more destructive of respect for the government and the law of the land than passing laws which cannot be enforced. It is an open secret that the dangerous increase of crime in this country is closely connected with this."
 

crazybear

Member
So I still want to know WTF are we going to do about it, I went to the library & copied a part of a paper written by a specialist in nerve pain & I'm going to write a letter to all that I can think of & send that along with my own story!
So what are you going to do , just bitch about them taking away our rights! They keep telling lies about everything, the DEA. won't reschedule cannabis to schedule 3 where it should be , they keep trying to deny medical cannabis , going against scientific facts & keeping the bullshit propaganda machine going! WTF!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:rant:
 

BigDawg

Member
what you wanna do? start a civil war? Wouldn't they just use the military to kill us? They aren't listening to shit.
 

bentom187

Active member
Veteran
sorry about all the med.satates,and i know its been said,but register republican 12 wks. before the primaries ,dont let the establishment win. cali has 55 electorate votes. and i beleive whoever has the most popular votes in NH all the electoral votes go to them. and NH will be the first in the nation to vote so it will be on the news.
 
R

rick shaw

Thats Dr. Ron Ron Paul,licensed OB/GYN. When he mentions pap smears...he's after the Jewish vote.
 

tenthirty

Member
Not only Ron Paul! We really want the most conservative president we can get.
A president that is a strong believer in states rights, even though said president does not believe in MMJ legalization, will shrink the federal government. (read less DOJ types to make our lives miserable) not to mention all of the other benefits of having less government in our lives.
 

HUGE

Active member
Veteran
Not only Ron Paul! We really want the most conservative president we can get.
A president that is a strong believer in states rights, even though said president does not believe in MMJ legalization, will shrink the federal government. (read less DOJ types to make our lives miserable) not to mention all of the other benefits of having less government in our lives.

There are 2 types of candidates. The ones that are paid for, an the ones that are not. "Ron Paul is the one that is not bought and paid for." that's all anyone needs tO know.
 

MIway

Registered User
Veteran
you must register Republican to vote Ron Paul in the primaries, 12 weeks prior to the vote.


it will feel very, very weird registering as a republican... but playing dirty isn't beyond me. even if to just shake it up a bit... can't say everything from RP fits in my cup of tea, but certainly the best way i can think to fuck w the system insofar as candidates are concerned. have to go to the SOS tomorrow for some other shit... gonna switch it over... and actually vote in the rep primary... ewww
 

m314

Active member
ICMag Donor
Veteran
I feel the same way. I'm a registered libertarian, but I'm switching to republican just to vote for Ron Paul. There's no way I'm actually voting republican if someone like Romney or Perry wins the nomination, though. I'll vote for whoever's nominated by the libertarians before voting for Obama or one of the mainstream republicans.
 

Frozenguy

Active member
Veteran
Anyone think that their threat to take personal property around the time that outdoor is being harvested is a bit of a coincidence?
 

dddaver

Active member
Veteran
Whoa. All that political talk could get this thread binned and I think that's exactly what some would like. But not MOST. Mods, GN, we really do need a political forum if only to protect free speech.
 

dagnabit

Game Bred
Veteran
it will feel very, very weird registering as a republican... but playing dirty isn't beyond me. even if to just shake it up a bit... can't say everything from RP fits in my cup of tea, but certainly the best way i can think to fuck w the system insofar as candidates are concerned. have to go to the SOS tomorrow for some other shit... gonna switch it over... and actually vote in the rep primary... ewww

This should be S.O.P. When one side has an incumbent.
Why would one not constantly change affiliation?
 
S

SeaMaiden

I just read the article Grow Tech posted and had to jump ahead. What a fucking specious argument! What message are we sending our children, is she fucking SERIOUS??

We advertise beer and alcohol, that sends a message to our children.

We advertise pharmaceutical drugs as the path to health, beauty and happiness. Does that not send a message to our children?

Especially when often those advertisements are immediately followed by ATTORNEY advertising!! Did you take Actos and then develop bladder cancer? Have you taken Zoloft and had a child with a birth defect? We can sue for you, even though you were warned not to get pregnant while taking it!

Good Christ.
 
Top