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More MJ enforcement to prevail

eyes

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Trump administration puts recreational marijuana in crosshairs
Sean Spicer at White House press briefing: 'Big difference' between medical marijuana and recreational marijuana

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Published: Feb 23, 2017, 2:14 pm • Updated: about 7 hours ago Comments (379)

By Alicia Wallace, The Cannabist Staff

States where recreational marijuana is legal will be subject to “greater enforcement” under the Trump administration, White House spokesman Sean Spicer said Thursday.

But watchers of Colorado’s billion-dollar weed industry are waiting to see whether Spicer’s statements during his daily briefing actually yield a real shift in enforcement policy.

“There’s a big difference between (medical marijuana) and recreational marijuana, and I think when you see something like the opioid addiction crisis blossoming in so many states around this country, the last thing we should be doing is encouraging people,” Spicer said, giving the first glimpse of the new administration’s views of the growing legal cannabis industry. “There is still a federal law that we need to abide by in terms of recreational marijuana and other drugs of that nature.”

Marijuana remains illegal under federal law, although voters in Colorado and seven other states and Washington, D.C., approved measures to legalize recreational pot sales and consumption. Medical marijuana is legal in 28 states, Puerto Rico, Guam and the District of Columbia.
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When asked about increased enforcement around recreational pot, Spicer said: “That’s a question for the Department of Justice. I do believe that you’ll see greater enforcement of it.”

Mark Bolton, marijuana advisor to Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper, said it would be premature to speculate about the administration’s intentions.

“We have worked with the Department of Justice since legalization to develop a framework that respects voters and promotes public safety,” he said in an e-mail.

Brookings Institution drug policy expert John Hudak said the White House statement “is not a death knell for recreational marijuana, nor is it clarification.”

Hudak said a troubling aspect of the briefing was Spicer’s “clear lack of understanding of federal law.”

Spicer claims there’s a difference between medical marijuana and recreational marijuana, Hudak said.

“I think it’s true in practice, it’s true in public opinion, but it’s not true in federal law,” Hudak said. “Medical marijuana is just as illegal as recreational marijuana.”

And yet, the Rohrabacher-Farr Amendment keeps the Department of Justice from spending money to enforce the Controlled Substances Act in medical marijuana states, he said.

“I think what is said from the podium and what happens in policy often have a disconnect,” Hudak said.
Pushing back in Congress

Uncertainty has lingered for months around how the Trump administration might handle the topic of marijuana legalization.

“The president has said time and again that the decision about marijuana needs to be left to the states,” U.S. Rep. Jared Polis, a Boulder Democrat, said in a statement about Spicer’s comments. “Now either the president is flip-flopping or his staff is, once again, speaking out of turn. Either way, these comments leave doubt and uncertainty for the marijuana industry, stifling job growth in my state.”

Polis is a member of the congressional Cannabis Caucus, along with Earl Blumenauer, D-Oregon, whose state started recreational sales in the fall of 2015.

“The national prohibition of cannabis has been a failure, and millions of voters across the country have demanded a more sensible approach. I’m looking forward to working with the leadership of our newly formed cannabis caucus to ensure that these wishes are protected,” Blumenauer said in a statement.

Colorado, which in 2014 became the first state to initiate recreational marijuana sales, recorded $1.3 billion in medical and recreational cannabis sales in 2016. Sales nationwide are projected to reach $24.5 billion by 2025, according to a report issued earlier this week by industry analytics firm New Frontier Data.
Adhering to Cole Memo for now

After winning the election, President Donald Trump nominated Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions a vocal opponent of legalization, as the nation’s attorney general. This raised questions about the direction the Department of Justice would take regarding the 2013 Cole Memo, which established guidance for when federal prosecutors should enforce U.S. marijuana laws..

All U.S. attorneys, including Bob Troyer, the acting U.S. attorney for Colorado and Wyoming, operate under the Cole Memo. While Spicer’s comments Thursday indicated new guidance may be coming, nothing new has been handed down.

“We will follow that guidance until, if or when, we receive new or amended guidance,” said Jeff Dorschner, a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Colorado.

Trump has wavered on the marijuana legalization issue, but said on the campaign trail that he favors states’ rights and would not interfere even with legal recreational-use states such as Colorado.

Andrew Freedman, a marijuana regulations consultant who previously served as Colorado’s director of marijuana coordination, said that it would be a very complicated exercise — especially legally — to unravel the regulations put in place by states such as Colorado, Washington and Oregon. The federal government also would be going against the will of voters who told their states to develop regulations, he said.

“States are set up to be laboratories of democracy,” he said.

States argue that by regulating the sale of pot they can help ensure public health and safety.

Freedman worries that if the feds try to undo the regulated pot industry, “in that vacuum it would be the black market that comes in to fulfill the supply.”
Economic impact

Report: America’s marijuana industry headed for $24 billion by 2025
‘Building the airplane while it’s being flown’: How California looks to build $7B legal pot economy
Don’t tread on weed: A plea to Trump administration to let marijuana legalization proceed
Struggling Canadian province anticipates ‘thousands of jobs’ created by marijuana

Dan Anglin, the chairman of the Colorado Cannabis Chamber of Commerce, said he was surprised by Spicer’s statements. A crackdown would harm the president’s popularity considering that legalization has broad support across the nation, he said.

“The administration has its hands full with a lot of other things which they intended to change,” he said. “This didn’t seem like something that was at the top 100 of President Trump’s list.”

Anglin didn’t expect an immediate crackdown, but said he wouldn’t be surprised if cannabis businesses received legal notices to stop selling and growing. If that does happen, he said he hopes Attorney General Cynthia Coffman will step up to defend Colorado’s constitution.

In the meantime, Anglin said it will be business as usual at his Boulder edibles company, Americanna.

As a voting Republican, Anglin said he was disappointed by the federal government stepping in on what he called a states’ rights issue.

“If we were issued a federal order to cease and desist, we would,” Anglin said. “However, I would imagine that many of us — if not all of us — would join in a suit against the federal government for making such a decision.”

Nevada Senate Majority Leader Aaron D. Ford released a statement saying Nevada Attorney General Adam Laxalt “must make it immediately clear that he will vigorously defend Nevada’s recreational marijuana laws from federal overreach. Not only did voters overwhelmingly vote to approve the legalization of recreational marijuana, the Governor’s proposed education budget depends on tax revenue from recreational marijuana sales. Any action by the Trump administration would be an insult to Nevada voters and would pick the pockets of Nevada’s students.”

Tom Angell of drug law reform group Marijuana Majority said: “If the administration is looking for ways to become less popular, cracking down on voter-approved marijuana laws would be a great way to do it. On the campaign trail, President Trump clearly and repeatedly pledged that he would leave decisions on cannabis policy to the states. With a clear and growing majority of the country now supporting legalization, reneging on his promises would be a political disaster and huge distraction from the rest of the president’s agenda.”

Denver Post staff writers Danika Worthington and Noelle Phillips contributed to this report.
 
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iBogart

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http://www.sfgate.com/news/politics...to-continue-use-of-privately-run-10954922.php

Eric Tucker, Associated Press
Updated 6:21 pm, Thursday, February 23, 2017


WASHINGTON (AP) — Attorney General Jeff Sessions signaled Thursday his strong support for the federal government's continued use of private prisons, reversing an Obama administration directive to phase out their use. Stock prices of major private prison companies rose at the news.

Sessions issued a memo replacing one issued last August by Sally Yates, the deputy attorney general at the time.

That memo, which followed a harshly critical government audit of privately run prisons, directed the federal Bureau of Prisons to begin reducing and ultimately end its reliance on contract facilities. Yates, in her announcement, said private facilities have more safety and security problems than government-run ones and were less necessary given declines in the overall federal prison population.

But Sessions, in his memo, said Yates' directive went against longstanding Justice Department policy and practice and "impaired the Bureau's ability to meet the future needs of the federal correctional system." He said he was directing the BOP to "return to its previous approach."

The federal prison population — now just under 190,000 — has been dropping due in part to changes in federal sentencing policies over the last few years. Private prisons now hold about 21,000 inmates in 12 facilities, a fraction of the total BOP population, the Justice Department said Thursday.

Yet the federal prison population may increase again given Sessions' commitment to aggressive enforcement of drug and immigration laws, and his focus on combating violent crime.

The latest memo — issued just two weeks after Sessions was sworn in as attorney general — could be part of a more expansive rollback of criminal justice policies enacted by the Obama administration Justice Department, including directives against seeking mandatory minimum punishments for nonviolent drug offenders.

The private prison industry has been a major contributor to Republican political campaigns, particularly in recent years.
 

Tudo

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Tom Angell of drug law reform group Marijuana Majority said: “If the administration is looking for ways to become less popular, cracking down on voter-approved marijuana laws would be a great way to do it. On the campaign trail, President Trump clearly and repeatedly pledged that he would leave decisions on cannabis policy to the states. With a clear and growing majority of the country now supporting legalization, reneging on his promises would be a political disaster and huge distraction from the rest of the president’s agenda.”




Not to mention that it just would not be the right thing to do and frankly if you truly research this man you'll find that he's known for doing the right thing which makes this a surprise to say the least to any of us who grew up in the NYC/NJ area and read the almost weekly stories, almost all positive about Donald Trump, only to turn when he began a political run.


Oye Vey say it isn't so!


I don't have time right now to listen to the entire video but at roughly 13 minutes I heard him say that the president supports leaving the federal government out of the equation. Perhaps that changes or I didn't hear it right? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9RsCMC-uDz0


Sorry if I missed it I have to go to bed as I'm prepping for a surgical procedure tomorrow
 

stoned40yrs

Ripped since 1965
Veteran
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) A representative for the Alaska attorney general's office says a change in how the federal government enforces its own marijuana laws would not affect state marijuana laws.

Department of Law spokeswoman Cori Mills says Alaska's law legalizing recreational marijuana wouldn't be overturned.

She commented after White House spokesman Sean Spicer suggested during a press briefing Thursday that President Donald Trump's administration might crack down on states that have legalized marijuana for recreational use.

Mills says there is a different federal law, and it will be up to the federal government how they want to enforce that.

Cary Carrigan is executive director of the Alaska Marijuana Industry Association.

He says it's too early to get too worked up about Spicer's comments, and that this sounds like an initial overture.

Carrigan says, "You have to see something happen before you can really react to it."
 

armedoldhippy

Well-known member
Veteran
immigration law violators do not end up in federal prisons, nor do most recreational pot violators. i don't think that the feds have enough people to police even the states that have legal rec weed. they can shut down dispenaries using typical over-kill DEA raids to try to intimidate folks, but they cannot legally make state & local police enforce federal law. and without those bodies, they are toothless dogs barking at the end of their tired old rusty chain...fuck 'em.:tiphat: they are about to shove the market back completely underground & cost the states hundreds of millions of dallars in taxes. THAT will make them popular...:moon:
 

MJPassion

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The Feds need to stay out of States affairs & worry about their own territory!
DC is the only place that the Fed has actual jurisdiction over!
 

Betterhaff

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Veteran
“Marijuana should be made legal in the U.S., voters say 59 - 36 percent. Republicans are opposed 61 - 35 percent and voters over 65 years old are opposed 51 - 42 percent. Every other party, gender, education, age and racial group listed supports legalized marijuana.”

“The government should not enforce federal laws against marijuana in states that have legalized medical or recreational marijuana use, voters say 71 - 23 percent. Voters in every listed group support this position.”

From the February 23, 2017 Quinnipiac Poll.

https://poll.qu.edu/national/release-detail?ReleaseID=2432
 

genesis129

New member
One nation under God with liberty and justice.

What the hell are our founding fathers thinking of US right now and the chaos one megalomaniac can cause. Pass the tissue Tito.
 

Tudo

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The Feds need to stay out of States affairs & worry about their own territory!
DC is the only place that the Fed has actual jurisdiction over!




Tell that to the over 600,000 Americans who perished during the Civil War
 

Betterhaff

Well-known member
Veteran
OK, very confused. So now Medical Cannabis is, according to the current Administration, OK. Does that mean there is medicinal/therapeutic value with Cannabis? According to the DEA that is not true (they just stayed the classification of Cannabis at Schedule 1 last fall). So which is it?

Then the White House press secretary essentially said Cannabis is a gateway drug (same old)…because of the current opiod epidemic. I would like to see some proof or documentation of that. The latest statistics show that opiod use has fallen in states where Cannabis has been legalized.

I’m not even going to get into the States rights issue.

Maybe it's not me that's confused.
 

oldchuck

Active member
Veteran
immigration law violators do not end up in federal prisons, nor do most recreational pot violators. i don't think that the feds have enough people to police even the states that have legal rec weed. they can shut down dispenaries using typical over-kill DEA raids to try to intimidate folks, but they cannot legally make state & local police enforce federal law. and without those bodies, they are toothless dogs barking at the end of their tired old rusty chain...fuck 'em.

There are other ways the feds can screw with legalization. Each of the states that have legalized rec. can have federal sanctions slapped on them. These penalties can range across agencies because states have federal money and people in just about every pot. If applied in a big way the Trump people would go after the referendums to legalize. In smaller ways it could just be various kinds of pain within state governments. No raids needed but they will probably do that too.
 

GonjaLove

Member
It blows my mind how spicer is trying to compare opiod abuse with cannabis. I know a lot of people that have successfully quit opiates with the help of cannabis...myself included. Fuck!
 

EsterEssence

Well-known member
Veteran
There are other ways the feds can screw with legalization. Each of the states that have legalized rec. can have federal sanctions slapped on them. These penalties can range across agencies because states have federal money and people in just about every pot. If applied in a big way the Trump people would go after the referendums to legalize. In smaller ways it could just be various kinds of pain within state governments. No raids needed but they will probably do that too.

It would be great if at least one of the legal states said screw the fed money, we make more from cannabis tax...
 

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