Los Angeles Times

Illegal stores thrive despite crime, raids

Pot’s black market booms in plain sight as pricier legal shops struggle to compete.

- By Matthew Ormseth

When the cannabis dispensary Hierba opened on Cesar Chavez Avenue in October, customers had “sticker shock,” Guillermo Menjivar, the general manager, recalled.

Even with a 30% opening week discount, shoppers still couldn’t understand why, for instance, a gram of First Class Funk cost $15.

They could be forgiven: Until Hierba — the first legal dispensary in the city’s Boyle Heights neighborho­od — opened its doors, the only options in the area were unlicensed storefront­s that charge far less for cannabis products because they don’t abide by the raft of taxes and regulatory obligation­s that state and local officials impose on legitimate operations.

A mile east of Menjivar’s clean, brightly lit business, in fact, an unmarked and unlicensed shop had put a folding sign out on the sidewalk that read, “4.5 grams for $20.” Inside the dimly lit room was a bare-bones array of grimy mason jars piled high with bargain-priced buds.

The continuing success of illegal cannabis shops and the struggles of legal ones in the heart of L.A.’s Eastside offer a stark illustrati­on of how California’s legalizati­on of marijuana has gone wrong. Far from being eradicated, the black market is booming in plain sight, luring customers away from aboveboard retailers with their cheaper — if untested and unregulate­d — product.

Unlicensed dispensari­es have become hotbeds of crime. Sometimes the operators are the perpetrato­rs, authoritie­s say, selling cocaine and methamphet­amine alongside cannabis. At other times, they are the victims. In August 2021, a man was gunned down in the doorway of the illegal dispensary he ran in East Los Angeles.

Authoritie­s have made little progress in curbing the cannabis black market. Prosecutio­ns are rare, according to court records, and employees say some dispensari­es don’t even wait a day to reopen after being shut down by the police.

“I don’t see it slowing down,” said one security

guard at an illegal dispensary that has been raided four times in the last year and a half. “Just look up and down the street. It’s everywhere. And everyone’s making money.”

In the battle over blackmarke­t and legal cannabis, Indiana Street is a dividing line. To its west is the city of Los Angeles, where local laws allow retail cannabis businesses to operate, provided the required licenses and permits are obtained.

On the other side of Indiana Street is East Los Angeles, unincorpor­ated county land where cannabis licenses are not issued and it remains illegal for anyone to operate a dispensary.

Investigat­ors for the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department say there are 25 to 30 illegal dispensari­es operating in the East Los Angeles area — the most of any of the department’s patrol regions. In all, there are an estimated 150 to 160 illegal dispensari­es in the department’s jurisdicti­on, which includes unincorpor­ated county land and cities that contract with the sheriff, according to a sheriff’s narcotics investigat­or who asked to remain anonymous because he works undercover.

Most of East L.A.’s dispensari­es are clustered along Whittier Boulevard. Long the commercial heart of the neighborho­od, the boulevard is crowded with narrow storefront­s offering money transfers, phone repairs and tailoring, pawnshops and medical clinics, shoe stores and immigratio­n law practices. Racks of discounted clothing compete for sidewalk space with women selling aguas frescas and chopped fruit.

Some of the dozen or so illegal dispensari­es operating on any given day along the boulevard advertise openly, with signage on the property and Yelp pages. Others are more discreet, changing their names or forgoing names altogether. One shop covered its windows with signage from the car insurance agency next door.

When undercover detectives asked employees in the shop’s lobby if they sold insurance, they laughed and said no, according to a search warrant applicatio­n. Detectives served the warrant last September, seizing cannabis, cash from the register and a safe, two handguns, a rifle, a drum ammunition magazine and bags of what authoritie­s suspected was cocaine, court records show.

Dozens of affidavits filed at the East Los Angeles courthouse to obtain search warrants make clear that for most dispensari­es along Whittier Boulevard, being raided by the police is no deterrent. One shop on Whittier Boulevard has been searched by the Sheriff ’s Department four times in the last year and a half, most recently in February, when detectives carried off its inventory and $819 in cash.

The dispensary’s security guard described a recent raid to a Times reporter. Deputies broke down the door, seized all the product and money, and cited him and several other employees. With a court date approachin­g, the guard said he didn’t plan to show up and predicted the authoritie­s wouldn’t pursue the case.

Investigat­ors seeking a judge’s permission to search an unlicensed dispensary and carry off evidence — cannabis, digital video recorders, cash, paperwork that might indicate its ownership structure — have a low bar to clear, search warrant records show. It is often as simple as noting people entering a storefront emptyhande­d and leaving with small white bags, walking into a shop in plaincloth­es and asking an employee about marijuana prices, or citing a dispensary’s Yelp page.

Detectives can also apply for a court order to shut off the business’ power for 90 days, although, as a deputy wrote in seeking yet another warrant to search Whittier’s Best Buds, operators “find creative ways to power the business.” When the shop was raided in February, detectives carried off a Predator 3500 generator along with cannabis and $4,159 in cash.

In the dispensary’s lobby, which was painted with a large, colorful cartoon character inhaling from a bong, a man who identified himself as the owner complained to a Times reporter about the Sheriff ’s Department’s raids, which he described as “legal robbery.”

“Tax, permit, license,” he said, ticking off the things for which a legal operator has to pay. “We’re going to take your money. Without [the] license, we’re going to f— you up with raids. Either way, you’re going to lose.”

The raids have not made him consider shutting down, he said. “Why am I going to close shop? People are crying for this stuff, crying for weed.”

Many of the people arrested on suspicion of operating or working at illegal dispensari­es in unincorpor­ated parts of the county are not prosecuted. Those who are typically don’t face cannabis offenses, but weapons charges after being caught with guns, according to a review of court records. Even then, some defendants were allowed to enter diversion programs and have their charges dismissed.

One man was arrested at Whittier’s Best Buds on suspicion of maintainin­g a place to sell controlled substances, a felony, and was found to be carrying a handgun, records show. Charged five months later with a misdemeano­r crime of possessing a concealed gun, the man avoided prosecutio­n by entering a diversion program. After he showed he’d taken a gun safety class and registered the weapon, the judge ordered the Sheriff’s Department to return $600 in cash and the newly registered Glock 19 handgun they’d seized from him, records show.

Greg Risling, a spokesman for the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office, said prosecutor­s charge people with crimes associated with operating illegal dispensari­es “when the evidence has been sufficient to prove.” The typical charge, Risling said, is a violation of the county prohibitio­n on cannabis dispensari­es, a misdemeano­r.

Lt. Howard Fuchs of the Sheriff ’s Department’s Narcotics Bureau disputed this. “The district attorney will not file these cases whatsoever,” he said. “Even if it’s near a school, they’ve told us they will not file these cases.”

The lieutenant said prosecutin­g people who operate or work at illegal dispensari­es — and securing meaningful penalties — would be the most effective way to shut them down. Other strategies, such as obtaining court orders to cut off a dispensary’s utilities, are easily circumvent­ed, he said, while civil actions pursued by county lawyers to evict or lock out illegal operators are time-consuming and difficult to carry out in a meaningful way given the scale of the problem.

Illegal dispensari­es, meanwhile, are making money “hand over fist,” Fuchs said. His detectives have seized cash and ledgers documentin­g sales that indicate the busier ones are making as much as $25,000 a day in revenue, he said.

An illegal dispensary can cost just a few thousand dollars to open, investigat­ors say: rent, product, some display cases, a surveillan­ce system, wages for a few employees.

Compare this with Menjivar’s dispensary, Hierba. The shop’s backers have invested several million dollars and worked for nearly three years to open it, he said. Driving up the start-up cost, he said, are delays in the applicatio­n process: State regulators certified the dispensary in April 2021, but city authoritie­s did not allow it to open until October.

For some applicants, the process has taken as long as 18 months, Menjivar said. All the while they must keep paying rent. “You’re literally at their mercy,” he said.

Legal operators must also abide by local regulation­s that dictate where dispensari­es can operate, socalled green zones away from schools and playground­s. This restricts the real estate available to a scrupulous dispensary operator.

All of this contribute­s to the price that consumers pay, Menjivar said. Certificat­ion that the product has been tested for toxins, excise taxes on wholesale purchases, sales taxes levied by state and local authoritie­s — “it costs more to do it the right way,” he said.

Vito Ceccia, a detective supervisor who oversees enforcemen­t of unlicensed cannabis shops for the LAPD, said police work alone won’t be enough to ensure legal dispensari­es survive. Local officials will need to educate the public about the benefits of patronizin­g licensed shops and stress the quality control that goes into their products.

“We realize this is not a law-enforcemen­t-specific issue anymore,” he said. “We’re not going to arrest our way out of unlicensed cannabis sales.”

The evening of Aug. 11, 2021, Daniel Franco was standing outside the illegal dispensary that he operated on Whittier Boulevard when a barrage of gunshots were fired from across the street.

As Franco tried to retreat inside, a bullet went through his head. He died on the f loor of the shop, six feet from his revolver, which was resting on a table, according to a coroner’s report. A coroner’s investigat­or noted bullet holes in the walls and “large amounts” of cannabis heaped in plastic trays in the room where Franco died.

His death is one example of the violence that plagues illegal dispensari­es, whose owners, employees and customers are vulnerable to being robbed, swindled or killed, authoritie­s say. Nonfatal crimes are rarely reported for fear of drawing scrutiny from the police.

It’s unclear why Franco was targeted; the sheriff’s detective investigat­ing his death, Scott Giles, declined to discuss the case. “We don’t want the public or the people responsibl­e to know what we know,” he said. No arrests have been made.

In a search warrant served in connection with the shooting, sheriff ’s investigat­ors said they believed Franco’s shop may have been associated with another illegal dispensary. A week after the killing, someone called the Sheriff’s Department to report seeing two men, one carrying an AR-15style assault rifle, enter a store on Cesar Chavez Avenue a mile and a half northwest of Franco’s shop, a detective wrote in an affidavit used to obtain the warrant.

When deputies responded to the call and entered the store, they discovered it was a dispensary. Cannabis, hashish, honey oil and, in a corner, an AR-15 were in plain view, according to the warrant. Three men and a woman were detained, and detectives carried off the rifle, the cannabis products and $971 in cash.

Deputies had raided the shop — a blue stucco building with an iron security door and no signage — three times in the last four months. Detectives believed the dispensary was “related” to Franco’s shop “because the same employees have been arrested at both locations on multiple occasions,” the warrant says.

One of the men detained that day, Israel Zuniga, has been charged with possessing a concealed gun in a public place, records show. He was arrested at the same dispensary three months later and charged with maintainin­g a place for the purposes of selling marijuana. In March, he was arrested a third time at the shop and now faces a second charge of possessing a concealed firearm, records show.

Zuniga, 23, has pleaded not guilty to the charges — all misdemeano­rs — and remains free, pending the resolution of his cases. He has not been charged in connection to Franco’s killing.

The dispensary on Cesar Chavez Avenue where Zuniga was detained remains open.

Most of the illegal dispensari­es in East Los Angeles are being “taxed” by gangs, said the undercover sheriff ’s investigat­or. The more sophistica­ted gangs demand money, while the cruder ones are content with free product, the investigat­or said. “They know they’re both doing illicit activity, and no one’s going to say anything,” he said.

Two of the area’s largest gangs, Varrio Nuevo Estrada and East L.A.-13, have opened dispensari­es of their own, according to the investigat­or, staffing them with gang members and selling not just marijuana but methamphet­amine, heroin and guns.

“They saw it was not complicate­d at all to run a cannabis storefront,” he said.

One security guard who works at several illegal dispensari­es said gang members had been trying to tax the owners of a shop where he worked on Whittier Boulevard. The guard, a 26-yearold Compton resident who earns $15 an hour to stand guard with an unregister­ed handgun, asked not to be identified because he is involved in illegal activity.

Around 9 one night last September, he noticed several men standing outside the dispensary. It seemed like they were casing the shop, he said, so he walked outside and hid his gun in his car: If he was about to get robbed, he thought he’d rather not have it on him.

Eight men walked into the dispensary. One pointed a gun at him and told him to lay down and put his hands behind his head, he recalled. They took his phone and his keys. He heard the screams of the women who worked as bud tenders, he said, and he thought they were all about to die.

The men took “everything we had,” he said, including the shop’s product, money from the register, and money and personal property from him and other employees. He believed the men who robbed the dispensary were from the same gang that had been trying to tax it. As far as he knew, he said, the owners never reported the robbery or the extortion.

“What are the shops going to do?” he asked. “Call the cops, when it’s illegal?”

California’s legalizati­on of recreation­al cannabis in 2016 ushered in a multibilli­on-dollar industry estimated to be the largest legal weed market in the world. But many of the promises of legalizati­on have proved elusive. In a series of occasional stories, we’ll explore the fallout of legal pot in California.

 ?? Photograph­s by Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? AN ILLEGAL cannabis dispensary on East Cesar Chavez Avenue in East Los Angeles. Despite having become hotbeds of violent crime, unlicensed dispensari­es are making money “hand over fist,” says a lieutenant with the Sheriff’s Department’s Narcotics Bureau.
Photograph­s by Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times AN ILLEGAL cannabis dispensary on East Cesar Chavez Avenue in East Los Angeles. Despite having become hotbeds of violent crime, unlicensed dispensari­es are making money “hand over fist,” says a lieutenant with the Sheriff’s Department’s Narcotics Bureau.
 ?? ?? INVESTIGAT­ORS for the L.A. County Sheriff ’s Department say there are 25 to 30 illegal dispensari­es operating in the East Los Angeles area, including this one along Whittier Boulevard, where many are clustered.
INVESTIGAT­ORS for the L.A. County Sheriff ’s Department say there are 25 to 30 illegal dispensari­es operating in the East Los Angeles area, including this one along Whittier Boulevard, where many are clustered.
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