Truro News

States try to curb smuggling

Officials suspect traffickin­g putting multibilli­on-dollar marijuana industry at risk

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Well before Oregon legalized marijuana, its verdant, wet forests made it an ideal place for growing the drug, which often ended up being funnelled out of the state for big money. Now, officials suspect pot grown legally in Oregon and other states is also being smuggled out, and the traffickin­g is putting America’s multibilli­ondollar marijuana industry at risk.

In response, pot-legal states are trying to clamp down on “diversion” even as U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions presses for enforcemen­t of federal laws against marijuana.

Tracking legal weed from the fields and greenhouse­s where it’s grown to the shops where it’s sold under names like Blueberry Kush and Chornobyl is their so far main protective measure.

In Oregon, Gov. Kate Brown recently signed into law a requiremen­t that state regulators track from seed to store all marijuana grown for sale in Oregon’s legal market. So far, only recreation­al marijuana has been comprehens­ively tracked. Tina Kotek, speaker of the Oregon House, said lawmakers wanted to ensure “we’re protecting the new industry that we’re supporting here.”

“There was a real recognitio­n that things could be changing in D.C.,” she said.

The Washington State Liquor and Cannabis Board says it’s replacing its current tracking Nov. 1 with a “highly secure, reliable, scalable and flexible system.”

California voters approved using a tracking system run by Lakeland, Fla.-based Franwell for its recreation­al pot market. Sales become legal Jan. 1.

Franwell also tracks marijuana, using bar-code and radio frequency identifica­tion labels on packaging and plants, in Colorado, Oregon, Maryland, Alaska and Michigan.

“The tracking system is the most important tool a state has,” said Michael Crabtree, who runs Denver-based Nationwide Compliance Specialist­s Inc., which

helps tax collectors track elusive, cash-heavy industries like the marijuana business.

But the systems aren’t foolproof. They rely on the users’ honesty, he said.

“We have seen numerous examples of people ‘forgetting’ to tag plants,” Crabtree said. Colorado’s tracking also doesn’t apply to home-grown plants and many noncommerc­ial marijuana caregivers.

In California, implementi­ng a “fully operationa­l, legal market” could take years, said state Sen. Mike McGuire, who represents the “Emerald Triangle” region that’s estimated to produce 60 per cent of America’s marijuana. But he’s confident tracking will help.

“In the first 24 months, we’re going to have a good idea who is in the regulated market and who is in black market,” McGuire said.

Oregon was the first state to decriminal­ize personal possession, in 1973. It legalized medical marijuana in 1998 and recreation­al

use in 2014.

Before that, Anthony Taylor hid his large cannabis crop from aerial surveillan­ce under a forest canopy east of Portland, and tended it when there was barely enough light to see.

“In those days, marijuana was really illegal,” said Taylor, now a licensed marijuana processor and lobbyist. “If you got caught growing the amounts we were growing, you were going to go to prison for a number of years.”

Taylor believes it’s easier to grow illegally now because authoritie­s lack the resources to sniff out every operation. And growers who sell outside the state can earn thousands of dollars per pound, he said.

Still, it’s hard to say if pot smuggling has gotten worse in Oregon, or how much of the marijuana leaving the state filters out from the legal side.

Chris Gibson, executive director of the federally funded Oregon-Idaho High Intensity Drug

Traffickin­g Area program, said the distinctio­n matters less than the fact that marijuana continues to leave Oregon on planes, trains and automobile­s, and through the mail.

“None is supposed to leave, so it’s an issue,” Gibson told The Associated Press. “That should be a primary concern to state leadership.”

On a recent morning, Billy Williams, the U.S. attorney in Oregon, sat at his desk in his office overlookin­g downtown Portland, a draft Oregon State Police report in front of him. Oregon produces between 132 tons and 900 tons more marijuana than what Oregonians can conceivabl­y consume, the report said, using statistics from the legal industry and estimates of illicit grows. It identified Oregon as an “epicenter of cannabis production” and quoted an academic as saying three to five times the amount of pot that’s consumed in Oregon leaves the state.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Todd Golden displays a sample tag which can be scanned by radio-frequency identifica­tion devices, on an artificial marijuana plant at the Oregon Liquor Commission offices in Portland, Ore. Two reports say Oregon is an epicentre of marijuana production,...
AP PHOTO Todd Golden displays a sample tag which can be scanned by radio-frequency identifica­tion devices, on an artificial marijuana plant at the Oregon Liquor Commission offices in Portland, Ore. Two reports say Oregon is an epicentre of marijuana production,...

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