The Palm Beach Post

Spicer: Justice to crack down on recreation­al pot

- By Sadie Gurman Associated Press ALSO INSIDE

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department will step up enforcemen­t of federal law against recreation­al marijuana, White House spokesman Sean Spicer said Thursday, of fe r i ng t he Tr ump administra­tion’s strongest indication to date of a looming crackdown on the drug.

“I do believe you’ll see greater enforcemen­t of it,” Spicer said in response to a question during a news conference. But he offfffffff­fffered no details about what such enforcemen­t would entail. President Donald Trump does not oppose medical marijuana, he added, but “that’s very diffffffff­fffferent than recreation­al use, which is something the Department of Justice will be further looking into.”

A renewed focus on recreation­al marijuana in states that have legalized pot would present a departure from the Trump administra­tion’s statements in favor of states’ r ights. A day earlier, the administra­tion announced that the issue of transgende­r student bathroom access was best left to states and local communitie­s to decide.

Enforcemen­t would also shift away from marijuana poli c y under the Obama administra­tion, which said in a 2013 memo that it would not intervene in states’ marijuana laws as long as they prevent the drug from crossing state lines and keep it from falling into the hands of children and drug cartels.

But the memo carried no force of law and could be rewritten by Attorney General Jeffff Sessions, who has consistent­ly said he opposes legal marijuana.

Eight states and Washing-

County commission­ers OK zoning moratorium on medical marijuana sites,

ton, D.C., have legalized marijuana for recreation­al use. The Justice Department has several options available should it decide to enforce the law, including fifiling lawsuits on the grounds that state laws regulating pot are acting unconstitu­tionally because they are pre-empted by federal law. Enforcemen­t could also be as simple as directing U.S. attorneys to send letters to recreation­al marijuana businesses letting them know they are breaking the law.

Washington’s attorney general, Bob Ferguson, said he and Gov. Jay Inslee, both Democ r a t s , re qu e s t e d a meeting with Sessions about his approach to legal, regulated marijuana. Ferguson led the states in fifighting offff Trump’s executive order on immigratio­n in court and said Thursday he’s prepared to lead the way in defending legal marijuana, too. “We will resist any efffffffff­ffforts to thwart the will of the voters in Washington,” Ferguson said.

Kevin Sabet, head of the group Smart Approaches to Marijuana, said pot enforcemen­t is a matter of public safety. “The current situation is unsustaina­ble,” he said in a statement. “States that have legalized marijuana continue to see a black market for the drug, increased rates of youth drug use, continued high rates of alcohol sales, and interstate traffiffic­king, with drug dealers taking advantage of non-enforcemen­t.”

A Quinnipiac poll Thursday said 59 percent of Americans think marijuana should be legal and 71 percent would oppose a federal crackdown.

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