Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

LA’s licensed pot stores losing sales to horde of illegal outlets

- MICHAEL BALSAMO

LOS ANGELES — A slight marijuana smell wafted out as a steady stream of customers walked into a warehouse, its doors and windows covered by bars.

Suddenly, police swooped in.

“Sheriff’s department! Search warrant!” a Los Angeles County deputy shouted as the team thundered through the front door and began hauling out people in handcuffs.

The Compton 20 Cap Collective just south of Los Angeles that was raided earlier this spring is one of hundreds of illegal marijuana stores operating in Los Angeles County, where marijuana is legal for anyone 21 and over and retailers must be licensed to sell to it.

Broad marijuana legalizati­on arrived in California at the start of the year. From the beginning, there was concern the legal market would be undercut by the huge black market that has existed for decades.

And that’s what’s happening. Nowhere is it a bigger problem than in the state’s biggest legal marijuana market: Los Angeles County.

The number of outlaw dispensari­es in the county greatly outnumbers about 150 licensed storefront retailers.

That reality is a buzz kill for those trying to play by the rules.

Legal cannabis shops are losing customers who can get products more cheaply at illegal outlets that don’t charge or pay taxes, said Adam Spiker, executive director of the Southern California Coalition, a trade organizati­on that represents cannabis growers, distributo­rs and dispensary owners.

It’s an “unfair competitiv­e situation for licensed businesses,” Spiker said.

“I think if you turn the tables and took cannabis out of the equation — if it was another industry that didn’t have the stigmas — the government would do everything they could to give those licensed businesses paying taxes a level playing field.”

One of the selling points for legalizati­on was it would generate a tax windfall for state and local government­s. However, during the first quarter, the state reported only $34 million from cultivatio­n and excise taxes, putting it on pace to fall well below the $175 million forecast for the first six months.

In April, state regulators sent nearly 1,000 cease-anddesist letters to cannabis businesses they suspected were operating illegally. An analysis by the trade publicatio­n Marijuana Business Daily found about 64 percent of the businesses were in the Los Angeles metropolit­an area.

Last month, the city attorney’s office charged 142 people as part of a crackdown on illegal dispensari­es. It also sent out cease-and-desist letters but declined to say how many.

Los Angeles County boasts the nation’s largest sheriff’s office, but even it has nowhere near the manpower to take down all the illegal pot shops. A task force overseen by Lt. Frank Montez raids an average of one dispensary a week.

However, the voter-approved ballot measure legalizing cannabis in California included a provision that made possessing more than 28.5 grams — 1 ounce — only a misdemeano­r. That means officers can seize businesses’ cash and marijuana, but employees and owners rarely face jail, and illegal operations often quickly reopen.

“It’s a money-lucrative business so there are people willing to take the risk,” said Capt. Holly Francisco, who commands the sheriff’s office’s narcotics unit.

Montez sees his work as more than code enforcemen­t. Marijuana sold illegally may be tainted with illejgal pesticides and other harmful substances. And licensed marijuana-shop owners who pay their taxes should have a fair playing field, he said.

“When you have an illegitima­te, illegal dispensary operating, that not only hurts the industry as a whole but that really hurts the community,” Montez said.

At the Compton store, a sign above a security window says customers must be at least 18 and have a physician’s recommenda­tion to buy medical marijuana and be 21 and have a valid photo ID for anything else. Like many others, the shop operated in plain sight and advertised online, including on WeedMaps, a go-to website for people looking to buy cannabis.

Inside, whiteboard­s on dirt-smudged walls advertised the prices for different types of cannabis and concentrat­es.

Cartridges for vapor pens and “Shatter,” a honeylike oil containing cannabis extract, cost between $15 and $30. Large display cases held jars of branded marijuana strains — 28 grams of “Purple Dragon” sold for $160.

“People out here on the street are thinking it is a legitimate operation and are smoking this cannabis with all these dangerous pesticides, and they are really killing themselves,” Montez said.

Some illegal pot shops look so legitimate that customers may not even realize they are illegal unless they figure out they aren’t being charged tax. But like any shopper looking for the best deal, plenty know these places are illegal and go because it’s cheaper.

While some illegal pot shops grow their own plants, many are supplied by illegal growers in the hills of Northern California, long a major source of all U.S. pot.

Lake County, about 125 miles north of San Francisco, is home to many such plots because of its topography, which allows pot farmers to easily hide large operations. It has an abundance of federal and state forests and land where cartels set up operations.

Like the Los Angeles County sheriff’s office, Lake County lacks the manpower to put much of a dent in illegal operations.

Deputies patrol on the ground and in helicopter­s, and last year they destroyed about 250,000 plants and arrested 46 people for illegal plots, Sheriff Brian Martin said.

He has no estimate for the number of illegal farms in the county but is confident the hundreds of thousands of plants deputies chop down each year are “just the tip of the iceberg.”

Martin said his shortstaff­ed office has assigned a single detective full time to marijuana eradicatio­n. He counts on help from state and federal agencies, but they too have their priorities.

“It’s all about manpower,” he said. “No one has enough of it.”

 ?? AP/ JAE C. HONG ?? Deputies dump marijuana into an evidence bag. A Los Angeles County sheriff’s official said a special task force raids an average of one illegal dispensary a week.
AP/ JAE C. HONG Deputies dump marijuana into an evidence bag. A Los Angeles County sheriff’s official said a special task force raids an average of one illegal dispensary a week.
 ?? AP/JAE C. HONG ?? Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies raid an illegal marijuana shop in Compton, Calif., in March.
AP/JAE C. HONG Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies raid an illegal marijuana shop in Compton, Calif., in March.

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