Man Sues Idaho Cops for Arresting Him Because He Had CO License on His Car

CBS Seattle:  “An Idaho state trooper arrested and fully searched a 70-year-old Washington man’s vehicle solely because he had a Colorado license plate – a state where marijuana is legal – a federal ‘license plate profiling’ lawsuit alleges. . . . Roseen’s federal lawsuit seeking punitive damages alleges that Klitch, the second officer Christensen, Payette County Sheriff’s Deputy Webster (first names unlisted), and the Idaho State Police violated his Fourth, Fifth and 14th Amendment Rights and claims the search of his car was unjustified.

By |2019-06-14T08:27:51-07:00March 31st, 2014|Colorado News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Man Sues Idaho Cops for Arresting Him Because He Had CO License on His Car

Job Seekers Swarm Marijuana Job Fair

CBS Denver: “If there was any doubt that the ‘green rush’ is on in Colorado, the scene outside a marijuana industry career fair in Denver on Thursday looked like a throwback to the Great Recession.  Thousands of people waited for hours with resumes in hand in a line that stretched several blocks. The O.penVAPE Cannabis Job Fair featured 15 different businesses associated with recreational marijuana sales, and it had turn people away by the day’s end.”

By |2014-03-15T16:50:50-07:00March 15th, 2014|Colorado News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Job Seekers Swarm Marijuana Job Fair

People In Other States Say Colorado Pot Is Better, Stronger

 CBS Denver:  “Colorado is one of 20 states where medical marijuana is legal and one of two states where recreational pot is legal for adults. Texas is not one of those states, but some people who live there claim they are getting high thanks to family and friends shipping the drug to them.”

By |2014-02-22T06:56:52-07:00February 22nd, 2014|Colorado News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on People In Other States Say Colorado Pot Is Better, Stronger

Feds Worry Drug Cartels are Moving into Colorado

USA Today:  “An ongoing federal investigation is raising questions about the Colorado marijuana industry’s ties to illegal drug operations. Widespread raids on Nov. 21 targeted more than a dozen dispensaries, warehouses, homes and grow operations. Agents are gathering evidence to prove Colombian drug cartels are coming to the state and are using the front of legal marijuana to make money illegally.”

By |2014-02-16T07:25:23-07:00February 16th, 2014|Colorado News, Federal Dispensary Attacks, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Feds Worry Drug Cartels are Moving into Colorado

Marijuana and hashish-infused Edibles

Breitbart:  “Marijuana and hashish-infused edibles are back in vogue. The culinary phenomenon was portrayed with great humor in the 1968 cult film starring Peter Sellers, I Love You, Alice B. Toklas. Now psychedelic edibles are on sale legally in Colorado, and they are causing some consternation for state regulators.

By |2014-02-25T07:11:16-07:00January 28th, 2014|Colorado News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Marijuana and hashish-infused Edibles

Colorado Shop Owners Can’t Keep Marijuana Edibles in Stock

ABC News:  “Colorado residents may wind up with ‘pot bellies’ if they keep filling up on marijuana edibles at this pace.  Ever since recreational marijuana sales began in the state on Jan. 1, many shop owners said they have been unable to keep pot-infused candies, cookies and sodas in stock.”

By |2014-01-19T08:28:23-07:00January 19th, 2014|Colorado News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Colorado Shop Owners Can’t Keep Marijuana Edibles in Stock

Inside Colorado’s Green Rush

USA Today:  “The legal sales have spurred heavy demand, and some smaller stores have reported either rationing sales or running out entirely. Prices have changed accordingly: . . . the retail price of pot leaped from about $2,500 a pound to $6,000 a pound within days of Jan. 1.  State and local taxes add up to about 20%-25% of the purchase price, depending on location, and vendors are allowed to charge whatever the market will bear. Customers from across the country have flocked to the Denver area, where most of the stores are located. Some smaller communities have banned sales, while others are developing their permitting processes.”

By |2014-01-12T11:29:26-07:00January 12th, 2014|Colorado News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Inside Colorado’s Green Rush

Colorado Pot Shops Likely Cartel Targets

Fox News:  “As the smoke settles from the first week of legal marijuana sales in Colorado, experts are warning that sanctioned pot dealers could become targets for the very folks they put out of business.  Taking over a trade once ruled by drug cartels and turning it into an all-cash business could make pot shops prime targets for extortion, black-market competition and robbery. One veteran border narcotics agent told FoxNews.com Colorado’s legal pot industry will find it hard to keep the criminals from horning in on a lucrative business they once controlled.”

By |2019-06-14T08:27:47-07:00January 11th, 2014|Colorado News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Colorado Pot Shops Likely Cartel Targets

Colorado Pot Shop Runs Out Of Product, Others Raise Prices

CBS Denver:  “The first week of legal pot sales in Colorado is over, and now some Colorado pot shops are already running out of product.  In the past week, long lines of customers swamped the Colorado dispensaries that have been granted retail marijuana licenses and bought nearly $5 million worth of pot.”

By |2014-01-10T07:36:18-07:00January 9th, 2014|Colorado News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Colorado Pot Shop Runs Out Of Product, Others Raise Prices

Colorado Pot Purchases with Credit Cards

Wall St.  Journal:  “Buying marijuana for recreational use now is legal in Colorado—and paying for it with plastic is getting easier.  The official rules of Visa Inc.and MasterCard Inc. prohibit the use of their debit and credit cards for marijuana purchases, but some Colorado merchants are allowing customers to use them anyway.  That is because the card giants, owners of the processing networks that handle electronic payments, have quietly decided not to enforce their rules, according to people familiar with their strategies.

By |2019-06-14T08:27:47-07:00January 7th, 2014|Banking Issues, Colorado News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Colorado Pot Purchases with Credit Cards

Colorado’s Pot Shops Will Soon Be Out of Inventory

Time:  “A few days into the experiment, the new world of legal recreational marijuana sales in Colorado appears to be a big success—so much so that pot shops are finding it impossible to keep up with demand.  According to the Denver Post, at least 37 stores in Colorado were licensed to sell recreational pot to anyone 21 or over as of New Year’s Day. The Associated Press and others reported long lines outside Denver pot shops, with some eager customers forced to wait three to five hours before getting a chance to go inside, step up to the counter, and make a purchase.”

By |2015-04-06T18:57:49-07:00January 5th, 2014|Colorado News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Colorado’s Pot Shops Will Soon Be Out of Inventory

Feds Raid Denver Dispensaries

Denver Post:  “The details on the raids . . . come from an affidavit in the criminal case against Diaz and provide new context for the largest federal operation against medical-marijuana businesses ever in Colorado. Agents executed ‘approximately 15’ search warrants during the raids, the affidavit states. Sources have told The Denver Post that the raids — which a search warrant shows targeted 10 men — were part of an investigation into a single enterprise that detectives believe may have ties to Colombian drug cartels. . . . The raids focused especially on stores, cultivation warehouses and individuals connected to the VIP Cannabis dispensary in Denver.”

By |2015-04-06T18:57:49-07:00November 26th, 2013|Colorado News, Federal Dispensary Attacks, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Feds Raid Denver Dispensaries

Pot’s Black Market Backlash

thedailybeast:  “How prohibitionists and nanny staters are trying to keep marijuana illegal—or at least inconvenient.  In 2012, voters in Colorado and Washington passed full-on, no-hemming-or-hawing pot legalization by large majorities. Lawmakers in each state have spent the better part of the past year figuring out how to tax and regulate their nascent commercial pot industries . . . . Unfortunately, it’s starting to look like both states are going to treat pot in a manner similar to alcohol during Prohibition. Not only are pot taxes likely to be sky high, various sorts of restrictions on pot shops may well make it easier to buy, sell, and use black-market marijuana rather than the legal variety.

By |2013-11-15T19:26:34-07:00November 15th, 2013|Colorado News, Stories & Articles, Tax Issues|Comments Off on Pot’s Black Market Backlash

Colorado Police Use ‘Nose Telescope’ for Cannabis Odor Mapping

The Telegraph:  “Police in Denver are using a nose telescope to tackle unacceptable odors from the recreational use of marijuana. As more cities in America legalise the drug, attention has switched to the pungent smell that wafts from the joint itself. Denver has passed a new ‘odor ordinance’ with a potential $2,000 fine for anyone found guilty of polluting the atmosphere.”

By |2013-11-14T07:42:52-07:00November 14th, 2013|Colorado News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Colorado Police Use ‘Nose Telescope’ for Cannabis Odor Mapping

Colorado Voters Approve 25% Tax on Recreational Marijuana

Reuters: “A Colorado measure to impose sales and excise taxes of 25 percent on newly legalized recreational marijuana and earmark the first $40 million in revenue for public schools was approved by voters on Tuesday, Governor John Hickenlooper said.”

By |2013-11-06T07:51:45-07:00November 6th, 2013|Colorado News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Colorado Voters Approve 25% Tax on Recreational Marijuana

Industrial Hemp Harvested in Colorado, but Is It Legal?

Arizona Republic:  “Southeast Colorado farmer Ryan Loflin tried an illegal crop this year. He didn’t hide it from neighbors, and he never feared law enforcement would come asking about it. . . . Finished hemp is legal in the U.S., but growing it remains off-limits under federal law.”

By |2013-10-14T07:19:04-07:00October 14th, 2013|Colorado News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Industrial Hemp Harvested in Colorado, but Is It Legal?

Medical pot: Will Colorado’s “green rush” last?

60 Minutes:  “Twenty states have now legalized the medical use of marijuana for the treatment of things like glaucoma, the effects of chemotherapy, and chronic pain; defying federal laws that still consider marijuana more dangerous than cocaine and methamphetamine. In November, voters in two states, Washington and Colorado, went so far as to approve marijuana recreational use too. . . . if you want to know what legalized marijuana might look like, the place to go is Colorado, which has the most developed medical marijuana industry in the country.”

By |2013-09-16T07:06:39-07:00September 16th, 2013|Colorado News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Medical pot: Will Colorado’s “green rush” last?

Feds Seek To Corral Medical Marijuana ‘Wild West’

NPR:  “the administration’s hands-off position in Colorado and Washington will reverberate well beyond those states. And it could actually end up imposing some semblance of order in what drug law expert Mark Kleiman describes as the ‘Wild West’ of medical marijuana.  ‘And that would be a potentially very, very good result,’ says Kleiman, who previously worked in the Justice Department’s criminal division and is author of Marijuana Legalization: What Everyone Needs to Know. ‘Medical marijuana is a free-for-all in many states’,”

By |2013-09-16T07:01:57-07:00September 16th, 2013|Colorado News, Federal Dispensary Attacks, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Feds Seek To Corral Medical Marijuana ‘Wild West’

Denver’s Bad Spice Problem

CBS Denver:  “Health officials are continuing to see people being hospitalized with a bad reaction after taking ‘Spice.’ Police believe a bad batch of Spice is making its way around the Denver metro area and was responsible for sending dozens to the hospital last week. . . . Synthetic marijuana has been banned in Colorado.”

By |2013-09-02T16:17:04-07:00September 2nd, 2013|Colorado News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Denver’s Bad Spice Problem

Obama Administration will not Block State Marijuana Laws if Distribution is Regulated

Washington Post:  “The Obama administration said Thursday that it would not challenge laws legalizing marijuana in Colorado and Washington state as long as those states maintain strict rules involving the sale and distribution of the drug.  In a memo to U.S. attorneys in all 50 states, Deputy Attorney General James M. Cole said the Justice Department is ‘committed to using its limited investigative and prosecutorial resources to address the most significant threats in the most effective, consistent and rational way.’ He stressed that marijuana remains illegal under federal law.”

See also LA Times‘ “Marijuana advocates cheer Obama administration stand” that says “Dale Gieringer, a leading marijuana advocate in California, said he is encouraged by the new U.S. Justice Department memo, but he notes he has been encouraged by past memos only to see federal enforcement increase.”

Phoenix New Times‘ Ray Stern’s article “Arizona’s Medical-Marijuana Law Safe From Federal Action, For Now, in New Obama Policy” that looks at the story from the Arizona and Maricopa County perspective.  He quotes Maricopa Attorney Bill Montgomery’s take on the new memo:

The new policy “has no impact on the White Mountain case and any suggestions to the contrary are a pipe dream. . . . we’ll just have to wait and see how things play out.”

By |2013-08-30T07:31:48-07:00August 30th, 2013|Colorado News, Federal Dispensary Attacks, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Obama Administration will not Block State Marijuana Laws if Distribution is Regulated

Marijuana Repeal Considered In Colorado

CBS Denver:  “Marijuana legalization could be going back to the ballot in Colorado — a prospect that infuriated pot legalization activists Friday.  The proposal for a marijuana ballot measure came as the House started debate Friday evening on bills to regulate and tax pot. One bill would state how pot should be grown and sold, and the other would tax recreational marijuana more than 30 percent.”

By |2013-04-30T07:08:50-07:00April 30th, 2013|Colorado News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Marijuana Repeal Considered In Colorado

Legalized Pot Laws Draw Tourists to Colorado & Washington for 4/20

Associated Press:  “Thousands of people are expected to join an unofficial counterculture holiday celebrating marijuana in Colorado and Washington this coming weekend, including out-of staters and even packaged tours. The events and crowds will test the limits of new laws permitting pot use by adults.”

By |2015-04-06T18:56:51-07:00April 17th, 2013|Colorado News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Legalized Pot Laws Draw Tourists to Colorado & Washington for 4/20

Audit Finds Serious Flaws in Colorado’s Regulation of Medical Marijuana

Denver Post:  “State regulators charged with watching over Colorado’s medical marijuana industry have fallen short on everything from tracking inventory and managing their budget to keeping potential bad actors out of the business, a state audit released Tuesday found.  Often lauded as a national model, Colorado’s so-called seed-to-sale system of regulating medical marijuana does not exist auditors found. . . . The audit also found:”

By |2019-06-14T08:26:17-07:00March 28th, 2013|Colorado News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Audit Finds Serious Flaws in Colorado’s Regulation of Medical Marijuana

Colorado Ponders How to Tax Marijuana

Associated Press:  “Pot smokers in Colorado were the biggest winners in the vote that legalized the drug. Now state regulators are working out the details of exactly how to tax it, so the benefits are shared statewide in the form of increased revenue.”

By |2015-04-06T18:56:50-07:00March 1st, 2013|Colorado News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Colorado Ponders How to Tax Marijuana

Colorado Governor: Marijuana Legalization Is “A Challenge For Everybody”

BuzzFeed Politics:  “Hickenlooper is in talks with Attorney General Eric Holder to find the regulatory framework for what voters in his state called for by a wide margin. “No one’s got the answer on this one,” says the governor.  Governor John Hickenlooper said Saturday that he and U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder are working to establish a legal framework for the Colorado measure, passed by a 55-45 margin on the state ballot last November, to legalize the recreational use of marijuana.”

By |2013-02-25T07:22:19-07:00February 25th, 2013|Colorado News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Colorado Governor: Marijuana Legalization Is “A Challenge For Everybody”

Colorado Marijuana Regulators OK Pot Tourism

Associated Press: “Marijuana tourism is on the way to Colorado, under a recommendation made Tuesday by a state task force to regulate the drug made legal by voters last year. . . . Colorado’s marijuana task force was assembled to suggest regulations for pot after voters chose to flout federal drug law and allow its use without a doctor’s recommendation. . . . the task force agreed Tuesday that the constitutional amendment on marijuana simply says that adults over 21 can use the drug, not just Colorado residents. If lawmakers agree with the recommendation, tourists would be free to buy and smoke marijuana.”

By |2015-04-06T18:56:50-07:00February 20th, 2013|Colorado News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Colorado Marijuana Regulators OK Pot Tourism

Denver Considers Opting Out of Colorado’s Marijuana Legalization Law

CBS Denver:  “There’s a chance Denver will opt out of Amendment 64 despite the fact voters in the city overwhelmingly approved legalizing marijuana.  Some members of the city council argue that while the majority of Denver voters said yes to the amendment, it was in an effort to decriminilize small amounts. Their intentions may not have been to have a marijuana store in their neighborhood.”

By |2013-02-14T06:25:26-07:00February 14th, 2013|Colorado News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Denver Considers Opting Out of Colorado’s Marijuana Legalization Law

Colorado’s New Growth Industry: Pot

Los Angeles Times:  “Entrepreneurs ramp up after the state’s voters approved a constitutional amendment legalizing recreational use of marijuana. . . . The state [Colorado] has become a nucleus of the rapidly evolving marijuana industry, offering a glimpse at what life might be like if weed is legalized nationwide, with companies, entrepreneurs and investors maneuvering for a piece of the expected boom.  Dispensaries are handing out glossy prospectuses to lure investors. Luxury cannabis leisure magazines in the vein of Cigar Aficionado are promoting the industry and cannabis tourism. Companies are jostling for various sectors of the market, from grow lights to point-of-sale systems. And marijuana growers are shedding the pothead vibe to sell their services to MBAs, who may have the capital to get started but not the arcane knowledge required to produce good weed.”

By |2013-01-28T06:34:06-07:00January 28th, 2013|Colorado News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Colorado’s New Growth Industry: Pot

Acquitted Medical Marijuana Grower to Police: Return My Plants or Pay $3.3 Million

The Daily Chronic:  “A medical marijuana grower who was acquitted on drug cultivation charges in December wants the Colorado Springs police department to return the plants they seized in a March 2012 raid, or reimburse her over $3.3 million in damages.  Alvida Hillery, the founder of of the Rocky Mountain Miracles medical marijuana dispensary, filed a motion demanding the return of  36 pounds of medical marijuana and 304 plants seized by Colorado Springs police and the state Medical Marijuana Enforcement Division.  Hillery’s attorney, Sean McAllister of Denver, says that if her property is not returned, or is damaged, moldy or unusable, Hillery is entitled to $3,327,460 in damages.”

By |2013-01-10T05:31:48-07:00January 10th, 2013|Colorado News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Acquitted Medical Marijuana Grower to Police: Return My Plants or Pay $3.3 Million
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