Las Vegas Review-Journal

U.S. attorney: No pot at reservatio­n’s festival

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area, no edibles competitio­n, no cannabis topicals or lotions.”

Brezny said more than 10,000 tickets were sold for the festival about 35 miles north of the Strip. The concert is headlined by hip-hop artist Ludacris.

Robert Capecchi, federal policies chief at the Marijuana Policy Project advocacy group in Washington, D.C., said a lot of attendees might be disappoint­ed or upset that they can’t smoke on site.

But he noted that laws are different in federal areas within the eight states that have legalized recreation­al marijuana and the 28 states and the District of Columbia where medical marijuana is legal.

“There’s a different balance between the federal government and Indian tribes and the federal government and the states,” Capecchi said.

Bogden said a 2013 Obama ad- ministrati­on directive that was seen as relaxing enforcemen­t on tribal lands in states where pot is legal might have been misinterpr­eted. Pot remains illegal in Indian Country and on federal land, he said.

The sentence in his letter to the tribe was underlined, with the warning that “federal investigat­ion and prosecutio­n may still be appropriat­e.”

That was enough to prompt the tribe to declare that its police and event security won’t allow smoking, selling or transporti­ng marijuana at its festival grounds near its fireworks stand, liquor outlet and smoke shop just off Interstate 15.

“We hope that attendees enjoy themselves and comply with applicable law,” Darren Daboda, chairman of the tribe with about 350 members and a 112-square-mile reservatio­n, said in a statement.

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