CrazySessions Why the marijuana industry should worry about Sessions’ letter to Congress

gb123

Well-Known Member
A letter from Attorney General Jeff Sessions to leaders of Congress is the most recent in a long list of signals that the Trump administration is trying to crack down on marijuana sales.

Sessions sent a letter to leaders of Congress in May asking them to allow the Justice Department to prosecute businesses and individuals in states where medical marijuana is legal.

In the letter, Sessions asked the heads of both parties in the Senate and in the House of Representatives to undo medical-marijuana protections that prevent the Justice Department from using federal funds to enforce federal prohibition laws in states where medical-marijuana laws have been implemented.

The Hinchey-Rohrabacher Amendment, which enables such protections, is tied to the federal appropriations bill.

“I believe it would be unwise for Congress to restrict the discretion of the department to fund particular prosecutions, particularly in the midst of an historic drug epidemic and potentially long-term uptick in violent crime,” Sessions wrote.

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The industry is in denial, said Rafael Lemaitre, former associate director for public affairs for the Drug Policy Office under President Barack Obama.

“I don’t know how much more clear [the administration] needs to be on this,” Lemaitre said. “No one knows what’s going to happen, but this should scare anyone involved in the marijuana industry.”

People entering the marijuana industry have always needed to be risk averse, even in the Obama era, Lemaitre said. But anyone showing interest under the current administration has to be a little crazy, he quipped.







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Marijuana legalization supporters aren’t phased by Attorney General Sessions’ letter and the Marijuana Policy Project still has hope Congress will defend the industry’s protections.

“Law enforcement agencies always want every resource available and with as few restrictions as possible,” said Mason Tvert, communications director for the Marijuana Policy Project. “Most members of Congress agree the Justice Department should not be using federal tax dollars to meddle in state medical marijuana programs, and we hope they will rebuke the attorney general’s request.”
 

buckets

Well-Known Member
Unbelievable. Did Trump Lie? He said he would leave the medical states alone didn't he? I'm sure he was saying that over and over since the debates. Would he shut sessions down?
 

greg nr

Well-Known Member
DoJ has a big MJ strategy pow-wow coming up. I think its in July. Expect action later this summer. It takes time to reallocate resources and set priorities. Teams need to be formed, task forces created, priorities need to be resized. All of that will come to a head in the meetings they are planning. It will be more of a presentation than a fact finding session. This has played out before.

It is rare that actions on the national level happen quickly. The initial war on drugs took years to gain traction on the ground. This will likely move faster given the infrastructure that exists, but it will still take time. The difference here is that they are making ZERO attempts to prepare the country politically and gather public support. They don't seem to see the need.
 
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