The Denver Post

Attorney General Jeff Sessions is on the wrong side of history on the legalizati­on of marijuana.»

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Unable to slow the tide of marijuana legalizati­on that is sweeping the nation, Attorney General Jeff Sessions has instead decided to stoke fear and uncertaint­y in the burgeoning industry in a reckless effort to quell progress.

Sessions decided this week to rescind the limited guidance federal prosecutor­s had with regard to enforcing a federal prohibitio­n on growing, selling or using marijuana in states that had chosen to legalize recreation­al and medical marijuana.

We are unable to see any benefit to disturbing the robust recreation­al marijuana industry and beneficial medical marijuana care system in Colorado that has for the most part diligently followed state laws aimed at keeping the drug out of the hands of children, inside state borders and off the black market. The industry is paying substantia­l taxes and licensing fees and creating jobs. Shame on Sessions for trying to destroy what Colorado has built.

For four years, marijuana growers and sellers have operated under a 2013 memo from then-Deputy Attorney General James M. Cole assuring them U.S. attorneys across the nation would only move to enforce federal marijuana laws if the drugs were crossing state lines, being used by children, fueling criminal enterprise­s, increasing violent crime, or creating a public health crisis.

Six states have legalized recreation­al marijuana sales, including California, where the first pot shops opened this week. Massachuse­tts and Maine could begin sales this year, bringing the total to eight. An additional 21 states allow medical use of marijuana.

With limited exception, Colorado, the first to have legal recreation­al sales, has done a good job cracking down on problems when they arise. Our state attorney general, local and state law enforce- ment and the state’s U.S. attorney have teamed up on multiple operations to bust illegal grows and distributi­on rings and bring federal charges where appropriat­e.

Given that track record of enforcemen­t success in Colorado, Sessions’ intent can only be to stoke fear among those good operators who are following state laws. We join the majority of Colorado’s congressio­nal delegation in opposition to Sessions’ decision and federal raids of our thriving business community.

U.S. Sen. Cory Gardner said the move “has trampled on the will of the voters.” He went as far as to threaten to hold up nominees for U.S. attorney seats in response to the decision.

Fortunatel­y for Colorado, President Donald Trump never got around to appointing someone for U.S. attorney of the District of Colorado. As such, U.S. Attorney Bob Troyer has been elevated from acting attorney general. He was filling in after Obama appointee John Walsh resigned in 2016. Like Walsh, Troyer is unlikely to upend his office’s practice of pursuing the bad actors using the legal market to disguise criminal enterprise­s while allowing the industry to thrive.

That doesn’t make Sessions’ action inconseque­ntial, however. There are major ramificati­ons for adding uncertaint­y to those trying to help stop criminal marijuana sales and make money in the process. Imagine investing in an industry knowing you not only could lose all your money, but face time in federal prison based solely on the discretion of the U.S. attorney in your state.

Sessions is on the wrong side of history on this issue. We look to Republican­s in Congress and Trump, who once assured Colorado voters he would honor states’ rights on this issue, to remedy the situation with a change in federal law. The members of The Denver Post’s editorial board are William Dean Singleton, chairman; Mac Tully, CEO and publisher; Chuck Plunkett, editor of the editorial pages; Megan Schrader, editorial writer; and Cohen Peart, opinion editor.

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