“It is kind of concerning, but at the same time I’m going to keep doing what I got to do," Moss said.
www.phoenixnewtimes.com
Moss openly admits to mailing seeds across state borders. He buys seeds from growers in Washington, California, Oklahoma, and Michigan. People in Oklahoma made up his biggest customer base for a while.
Plant or not, federal authorities don't take kindly to distributing pot seeds in the mail.
Liz Davis, a spokesperson for the Phoenix division of the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, said that while marijuana is legal in some states, it's federally illegal under the Controlled Substances Act and cannabis seeds are therefore illegal to mail.
Whether stated as a souvenir or having an agricultural purpose, it is still a controlled substance and therefore nonmailable.
Davis added that if
New Times shared Moss' name and contact information, they would investigate further.
New Times declined her offer.
Phoenix cannabis attorney Tom Dean said Moss is facing serious legal jeopardy.
“My advice to him is not to do it,” said Dean, a former legal director for the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) who has practiced cannabis law for over 20 years.
That's no good, according to Dean. For one, un-sterilized seeds are
explicitly considered marijuana for the purposes of Arizona and federal law, meaning that selling them within Arizona requires a license. Even if selling seeds was legal in Arizona, transporting them between states and in the mail is a federal offense.