Las Vegas Review-Journal

Justice Department won’t challenge state pot laws

More states may look at legalizing marijuana

- By PETE YOST THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — In a dramatic change in drug policy, the Justice Department said Thursday that it won’t sue to stop the states of Colorado and Washington from allowing recreation­al marijuana use as it issued a sweeping national policy statement that outlines its priorities for pot enforcemen­t.

The action, welcomed by supporters of legalizati­on, could set the stage for more states to legalize marijuana. Alaska is scheduled to vote on legalizing recreation­al use of marijuana next year, and a few other states plan similar votes in 2016.

Under the policy, the investigat­ive priorities range from preventing the distributi­on of marijuana to minors to preventing sales revenue from going to criminal enterprise­s, gangs and cartels and preventing the diversion of marijuana outside of states where it is legal under state law.

Other priority enforcemen­t areas include stopping state- authorized marijuana activity from being used as a cover for traffickin­g other illegal drugs and preventing violence and the use of firearms in the cultivatio­n and distributi­on of marijuana. The areas also include preventing drugged driving, preventing growing marijuana on public land and preventing marijuana possession on federal property.

The announceme­nt follows last year’s first-in-the-nation legalizati­on of recreation­al marijuana use by the states of Colorado and Washington.

In the aftermath of the moves by the two states, Attorney General Eric Holder launched a review of marijuana enforcemen­t policy that included an examinatio­n of Colorado and Washington. The issue was whether the states should be blocked from operating marijuana markets on the grounds that actively regulating an il- legal substance conflicts with federal drug law that bans it.

Last December, President Barack Obama said it does not make sense for the federal government to go after recreation­al drug users in a state that has legalized recreation­al use of small amounts of marijuana. Last week, the White House said that prosecutio­n of drug trafficker­s remains an important priority.

A Pew Research Center poll in March found that 60 percent of Americans think the federal government shouldn’t enforce federal anti-marijuana laws in states where its use has been approved. Younger people, who tend to vote more Democratic, are especially prone to that view. But opponents are worried the moves will lead to more use by young people. Colorado and Washington were states that helped re-elect Obama.

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 ?? BRENNAN LINSLEY/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Members of a crowd numbering in the tens of thousands smoked marijuana and listened to live music this past April at the Denver 420 pro-marijuana rally at Civic Center Park.
BRENNAN LINSLEY/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Members of a crowd numbering in the tens of thousands smoked marijuana and listened to live music this past April at the Denver 420 pro-marijuana rally at Civic Center Park.

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