Cape Times

Marijuana cash often unbankable as law enforcemen­t fights Congress

- Lisa Lambert

ALTHOUGH the sale of marijuana is a federal crime, the number of US banks working with pot businesses, now sanctioned in many states, is growing, up 45 percent in the last year alone.

Still, marijuana merchants say there are not nearly enough banks willing to take their cash. So many dispensari­es resort to stashing cash in storage units, back offices and armoured vans.

Proponents believe the November 8 election could tip the balance in favour of liberalisi­ng federal marijuana laws, a move seen as key to getting risk-averse banks off the sidelines.

Measures on ballots in California, Florida and seven other states would bring to 34 the number of states sanctionin­g pot for medical or recreation­al use, or both.

That could push annual sales, by one estimate, to $23 billion (R317.35bn).

The prospect for a market of such scale is adding urgency to calls for a national approach to marijuana that expands banking options.

Law enforcemen­t and Federal Reserve officials have expressed concern about the fraud and crime associated with un-bankable cash.

Nearly 600 dispensary robberies have been reported in Denver since recreation­al pot was legalised in Colorado three years ago.

“There’s not a single human being who thinks there is any benefit at all in forcing marijuana business to be conducted on an all-cash basis,” said Representa­tive Earl Blumenauer, a Democrat from Oregon who has called for the decriminal­isation of marijuana since coming to Congress in 1996.

The US Justice Department said in 2014 it would not prosecute banks for serving state-sanctioned marijuana businesses. At the same time, the Treasury Department requires banks to report suspected drug crimes.

At last count, 301 banks were serving marijuana businesses, according to the Treasury Department.

The November 8 election could tip the balance in favour of liberalisi­ng federal marijuana laws.

Many more have avoided the sector out of fear that making the wrong call could put them at risk, said Robert Rowe, a vice president at the American Bankers Associatio­n.

The National Cannabis Associatio­n is pressing Congress for a law that would hold banks harmless for handling pot cash, said Michael Correia, a lobbyist for the trade group.

If California legalises recreation­al use next week, the nation’s biggest congressio­nal delegation will have a big stake in the issue.

In lieu of federal action, some states have tried their own fixes. Colorado created a credit union system for state-sanctioned marijuana businesses.

Access denied

But it fell apart when the Kansas City Federal Reserve denied a Colorado pot credit union access to the national payments system, which distribute­s currency and clears checks and electronic payments. California has no such plans, said Tom Dresslar, spokesman for the state’s Department of Business Oversight.

“This was a problem created by federal law,” Dresslar said, “and it needs a federal solution.”

In northern California, where growers serve state-sanctioned medical dispensari­es as well as the black market, the Community Credit Union of Southern Humboldt stopped opening pot business accounts because of the red tape and uncertaint­y, said senior vice president Janet Sanchez..

Dispensary operators unable to find willing banks tell tales of subterfuge, record keeping nightmares and armies of security guards.

Many open bank accounts and submit credit card charges in ways that obscure their true enterprise, such as “spa services.”

Susana de la Rionda has run a Los Angeles medical marijuana dispensary for 12 years and has had to find a new bank about once a year and submit to tax audits twice as often.

“I feel like a gangster,” she said.

 ?? FILE PHOTO: AP ?? Medical marijuana is rolled into a joint in Belfast, Maine, US. But marijuana merchants say that there are not nearly enough banks willing to take their cash.
FILE PHOTO: AP Medical marijuana is rolled into a joint in Belfast, Maine, US. But marijuana merchants say that there are not nearly enough banks willing to take their cash.

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