Los Angeles Times

Pot cash is being used to bribe officials

Cases of corruption tarnish already fraught rollout of marijuana permitting process.

- By Patrick McGreevy

SACRAMENTO — Sheriff Jon Lopey was startled when the mysterious stranger offered him $1 million if he would keep deputies away from certain illegal cannabis farms in Siskiyou County.

Lopey called in the FBI, and, later, deliveries of envelopes stuffed with thousands of dollars were recorded by cameras and microphone­s hidden on the sheriff ’s cluttered wooden desk. Two people were later indicted by a federal grand jury on charges of attempting to bribe the elected sheriff.

“I was surprised and offended that a citizen would believe a law enforcemen­t administra­tor would compromise his ethics and morals by accepting money,” said Lopey, whose rural county abuts the Oregon border and strictly outlaws outdoor pot farms.

In the more than two years since California voters approved the licensed growing and sale of recreation­al marijuana, the state has seen half a dozen government corruption cases as black-market operators try to game the system, through bribery and other means. The cases are tarnishing the already troubled rollout of the state’s permitting of pot businesses as provided for when voters approved Propositio­n 64 in November 2016.

Opponents of the initiative say the cases confirm their campaign arguments that legalizati­on wouldn’t end the black market and the criminal behavior it has unleashed.

“We knew this was going

to be an issue. The money is so great that the temptation is always there,” said William Lowe, a leader of the group Americans Against Legalizing Marijuana.

California is awash in cannabis cash from inside and out of the state, partly because pot remains an illegal drug under federal law, so banks won’t accept cash from the businesses. The state’s black market for cannabis was estimated to be worth $3.7 billion last year — more than four times the size of the legal market, according to the firm New Frontier Data.

Propositio­n 64 allowed the state to license businesses to grow and sell pot but required the firms to also get approval from cities and counties, most of which have outlawed pot operations. Experts say that local resistance explains why many of the corruption allegation­s center on illegal attempts to buy help from city and county officials.

“There is no doubt in my mind that the multibilli­ondollar nature of the marijuana industry is corrupting public officials,” said Lopey, a 41-year veteran of law enforcemen­t who began his full-time career as a California Highway Patrol officer stationed in East Los Angeles.

Propositio­n 64 also outlawed the transporta­tion of cannabis out of the state, which was an issue in the Siskiyou County indictment­s against Chi Yang and his sister, Gaosheng Laitinen.

Yang is accused of approachin­g the sheriff in his county office in Yreka in the summer of 2017 and initially suggesting the $1 million could go to a foundation headed by Lopey.

At one of the subsequent meetings where Lopey was handed the envelopes of cash, Laitinen sought assurances about what their payments would buy: “Are we talking about protection from being raided?” she asked the sheriff, according to a Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion agent’s affidavit that was attached to the criminal charging document.

The pair paid Lopey $10,500, including four $500 cash bonuses, before they were arrested, court records say.

That case is just one of several that have involved allegation­s of cannabis sellers and growers bribing or trying to bribe government officials, or public officials acting illegally to get rich from marijuana.

Last year, Jermaine Wright, then the mayor pro tem of Adelanto, was charged with agreeing to accept a bribe to fast-track a marijuana business. Wright’s trial is scheduled for August. In May, FBI agents served search warrants at the home of Rich Kerr, who was mayor of Adelanto at the time, as well as at City Hall and a marijuana retailer.

Also in May, Humboldt County building inspector Patrick Mctigue was arrested and charged with accepting $100,000 in bribes from marijuana businesses seeking expedited help on county permits, according to the Humboldt County Sheriff ’s Office.

Last March, a federal jury reached guilty verdicts to bribery and extortion charges against Michael Kimbrew, who was a field representa­tive to then-Rep. Janice Hahn when he accepted cash from an undercover FBI agent while pledging his “undying support” to protect a marijuana dispensary that the city of Compton was trying to close.

On Tuesday, developer Dorian Gray was held to answer by a judge in a preliminar­y hearing on charges of offering bribes to then-Oakland City Council President Larry Reid and Assistant City Administra­tor Greg Minor, according to court records. Gray is accused of offering the councilman cash to help obtain a cannabis dispensary permit and offering Minor, who oversees marijuana permitting for Oakland, a free trip to Spain.

Reid said he was offended by the offer made by Gray in his City Hall office, and reported it to the city administra­tor’s office.

Gray “said he had an envelope with $10,000 and my name on it in his pocket, and I told him I don’t work that way,” Reid said. “Everybody thinks they can become an instant millionair­e by getting a dispensary permit.”

Autumn Paine, an attorney for Gray, said the two city officials offered “wildly different” stories about what occurred.

As for the allegation of bribery against Gray, “he absolutely denies that,” she said.

An attorney for Laitinen declined to comment beyond saying that she had pleaded “not guilty.” Yang has also denied the charge in court, but his attorney did not return calls for comment.

An attorney for Wright declined to comment.

Not all of the recent cases involve elected officials. Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Deputy Marc Antrim pleaded guilty two weeks ago to federal charges stemming from his arrest for robbing a warehouse of a half-ton of marijuana in October.

Though some cases filed in the last year are still pending trial, other corruption cases have resulted in conviction­s in recent years.

Two decades ago, California was the first state to legalize the sale of marijuana for medical use. The former mayor of Cudahy was sentenced to one year in federal prison in 2013 for taking cash bribes in exchange for supporting the opening of a “medical marijuana” store in the city.

The head of the city’s code enforcemen­t division and a city councilman were also convicted of taking part in the scheme.

Law enforcemen­t agencies are investigat­ing possible corruption in other Southern California cities, said Ed Muramoto, a private attorney for medical pot dispensari­es that have complained about cities locking them out of competitio­n for permits.

“We have been contacted regarding a good handful of cities and jurisdicti­ons with respect to investigat­ions that law enforcemen­t is engaging in,” Muramoto said.

He declined to identify the cities involved, saying he has been asked by investigat­ors not to talk about pending inquiries.

Gov. Gavin Newsom, a key supporter of Propositio­n 64, declined to comment on the numerous bribery cases involving marijuana growers and sellers.

State law gives too much authority to local officials to dictate terms of city licenses, said Dale Gieringer, director of California NORML, a prolegaliz­ation group that supported Propositio­n 64.

“Corruption is always worse at the local level because there are so many more local officials and they aren’t under as much scrutiny as those in Sacramento,” he said.

State agencies, he said, “have been doing their best to expedite licensing, but too many local players have been getting their hands in the pie.”

The Siskiyou County case provides further evidence that California remains the largest exporter of pot in the nation.

Yang allegedly told the sheriff he wanted to ship California-grown cannabis to Missouri.

Sam Clauder can speak from personal experience about being caught up in illegal interstate activity after succumbing to financial temptation. The former congressio­nal aide and San Bernardino County Democratic Party official pleaded guilty in 2017 to charges in Texas of possessing 130 pounds of cannabis that he was transporti­ng back east from California.

Clauder started out driving pot from Humboldt County to legal medical cannabis dispensari­es in Southern California. He turned to illegal transporta­tion out of state after he was fired from a job as an aide to then-Rep. Joe Baca (D-Rialto) over an unrelated criminal case for which he was later found not guilty.

Clauder said cannabis growers paid him about $30,000 for every 100 pounds of marijuana he transporte­d back east, and he made the cross-country trip about 45 times before he was arrested in Texas.

“I think it’s a temptation, if you can’t make it legally, to cross a line,” Clauder said. “I went from working for a U.S. congressma­n to being homeless and destitute overnight. What was I supposed to do? I just fell into it.”

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? WHEN SHERIFF Jon Lopey was offered $1 million to keep deputies away from certain illegal cannabis farms in rural Siskiyou County, he called in the FBI.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times WHEN SHERIFF Jon Lopey was offered $1 million to keep deputies away from certain illegal cannabis farms in rural Siskiyou County, he called in the FBI.

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