Edmonton Journal

GROUP FLAGGED AT AIRPORT

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“He’s very embarrasse­d. He’s also shell-shocked. I feel bad for the guy,” Saunders said.

The only way to circumvent a lifetime entry ban to the U.S. is to apply for a temporary waiver that will permit you to cross the border for up to five years. But applying for a waiver is a long and cumbersome process, according to Saunders.

Cannabis is now federally legal in Canada, and legal for both recreation­al and medical use in 10 U.S. states, including Nevada, as well as Washington, D.C., but remains illegal federally in the U.S.

About a month before cannabis became fully legal in Canada, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) issued a statement saying that any individual working in the cannabis industry in Canada could be deemed inadmissib­le to the U.S. They later clarified that statement, confirming that any Canadian travelling to the U.S. for reasons unrelated to the marijuana industry, even though he or she works in the industry, would “generally be admissible.”

Those guidelines, however, do not prevent border officials from subjecting Canadian travellers who work in the cannabis industry an additional layer of security screening. At least 12 Canadians working in the cannabis industry were detained for hours at U.S. CBP’s preclearan­ce zone at Toronto’s Pearson Airport because they were en route to the same cannabis conference in Vegas.

Roderick Elliot, senior vice-president at the lobby firm Global Public Affairs, was scheduled to depart from Toronto on an Air Canada flight directly to Las Vegas on Nov. 13, but ended up missing his flight due to a two-hour wait in U.S. CBP’s secondary screening area, where he was subjected to additional questions about his affiliatio­n with the cannabis industry. Elliot’s colleague was also held up for secondary screening.

“The first border guard asked us specifical­ly why we were going to be in Las Vegas, and when we said we would be dropping by at the Marijuana Business Conference, he said, ‘I’m going to need you to come with me,’” Elliot told the Financial Post. He and his colleague were then ushered into a large white room — where 10 others travelling to Vegas for the conference were also waiting — and asked to not talk, and not use their cellphones.

“I am a big supporter of secure borders. But these border guards were deliberate­ly slowing down the process. It struck me that this was a fairly unnecessar­y measure, and they could have dealt with it in a much quicker way,” Elliot said.

Global Public Affairs consults for a number of sectors, including cannabis, but neither Elliot nor his colleague invest in the U.S. cannabis industry. “We wanted to make sure the border guards understood that,” he said.

The banned investor is not the first Canadian involved in the cannabis industry to receive such a sanction. In May, Vancouver-based venture capitalist Sam Znaimer, who was investing in U.S. cannabis startups, was interrogat­ed by border officials about his investment­s and also barred for life.

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