Chicago Sun-Times

JOINT REQUEST

States, including Illinois, seek meeting with Sessions to resolve pot law conflicts

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LOS ANGELES — California, Oregon and other marijuana- friendly states are seeking a meeting with U. S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions in hopes of resolving the conflict between federal and state laws that has left the nation’s cannabis industry in legal limbo.

Marijuana is illegal at the federal level, even as 29 states have legalized pot in some form.

State treasurers from California, Oregon, Illinois and Pennsylvan­ia told Sessions in a letter Thursday that businesses and banks need greater clarity on how federal law enforcemen­t will respond to the growing legalizati­on trend.

The Trump administra­tion lifted an Obama- era policy in January that kept federal authoritie­s from cracking down on the pot trade in states where the drug is legal.

The letter, released by California Treasurer John Chiang, said the absence of those federal rules “leaves the industry and financial institutio­ns in the dark.”

A shortage of banking services in California’s emerging pot industry is seen as a major obstacle to developing a thriving, regulated marketplac­e.

Legal pot sales for adults kicked off in the state on Jan. 1, but many banks don’t want anything to do with pot money for fear it could expose them to legal trouble from the federal government.

That’s left many businesses to operate largely in cash, which can make them a target for theft while posing risks for cannabis workers and the public.

Financial institutio­ns need “some comfort that they will not be prosecuted, or lose access to customer assets, simply for banking this industry,” said the letter, also signed by several cannabis industry groups and the Maine Credit Union League.

Congress this month extended restrictio­ns that prevent the Justice Department from prosecutin­g medical marijuana cases in legal- pot states.

Chiang, a Democratic candidate for governor, earlier formed a task force in an attempt to resolve banking problems for the marijuana industry.

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