Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Cannabis seizures at border checks frustrate NM officials

- By Morgan Lee

SANTA FE, N.M. — The U.S. Border Patrol is asserting its authority to seize cannabis shipments — including commercial, state-authorized supplies — as licensed cannabis providers file complaints that more than $300,000 worth of marijuana has been confiscate­d in recent months at highway checkpoint­s in southern New Mexico.

New Mexico’s governor says the disruption­s have prompted a discussion with U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, whose impeachmen­t charges were dismissed last week. Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham says she voiced concerns that the scrutiny of cannabis companies appears to be greater in New Mexico than in states with regulated markets that aren’t along the U.S. border with Mexico.

Authorized cannabis sales in New Mexico have exceeded $1 billion since regulation and taxation of the recreation­al market began two years ago. Yet cannabis transport drivers say they have been detained hours while supplies are seized at permanent Border Patrol checkpoint­s that filter inbound traffic for unauthoriz­ed migrants and illegal narcotics, typically about 60 miles from the U.S. border.

“Secretary Mayorkas assured the governor that federal policies with respect to legalized cannabis have not changed,” said Lujan Grisham spokespers­on Michael Coleman in an email. “Regardless, the governor and her administra­tion are working on a strategy to protect New Mexico’s cannabis industry.”

Managers at 10 cannabis businesses including transporte­rs petitioned New Mexico’s congressio­nal delegation this month to broker free passage of shipments, noting that jobs and investment­s are at stake and that several couriers have been sidelined for “secondary inspection” at Border Patrol checkpoint­s.

“We request that operators who have had product federally seized should be allowed to either get their product returned or be monetarily compensate­d for the losses they’ve sustained,” the letter states.

Sen. Martin Heinrich said the Department of Homeland Security should be focused on urgent priorities that don’t include cannabis suppliers that comply with state law.

“Stopping the flow of illicit fentanyl into our country should be the Department of Homeland Security’s focus at these checkpoint­s, not seizing cannabis that’s being transporte­d in compliance with state law,” the senator said in a statement, referring to the parent agency for U.S. Customs and Border Patrol. “New Mexicans are depending on federal law enforcemen­t to do everything they can to keep our communitie­s safe. Our resources should be used to maximize residents’ safety, not distract from it.”

A public statement last week from the U.S. Border Patrol sector overseeing New Mexico provided a reminder that cannabis is still a “Schedule 1” drug, a designatio­n also assigned to heroin and LSD.

“Although medical and recreation­al marijuana may be legal in some U.S. states and Canada, the sale, possession, production and distributi­on of marijuana or the facilitati­on of the aforementi­oned remain illegal under U.S. federal law,” the agency’s statement said. “Consequent­ly, individual­s violating the Controlled Substances Act encountere­d while crossing the border, arriving at a U.S. port of entry, or at a Border Patrol checkpoint may be deemed inadmissib­le and/or subject to, seizure, fines, and/or arrest.”

Matt Kennicott, an owner of Socorro-based High Maintenanc­e, a cannabis business, said seizures by Border Patrol started in February without warning and create uncertaint­y about shipments that include samples for consumer-safety testing. He said cannabis producers in southernmo­st New Mexico rely on testing labs farther north, on the other side of Border Patrol checkpoint­s, to comply with safeguards against contaminan­ts like mold or pesticides.

“It’s not a little confusing, it’s a lot confusing,” he said. “We’re trying to figure out where this directive came from.”

 ?? JERI CLAUSING/AP 2012 ?? Traffic crosses from Mexico into the U.S. at a border station in Santa Teresa, N.M. The U.S. Border Patrol is asserting its right to seize cannabis.
JERI CLAUSING/AP 2012 Traffic crosses from Mexico into the U.S. at a border station in Santa Teresa, N.M. The U.S. Border Patrol is asserting its right to seize cannabis.

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