29 States Have Legal Pot. Jeff Sessions Wants To Stamp It Out, And He's Close

Ron Strider

Well-Known Member
The 85 words almost seemed an afterthought when Congress hurriedly crammed them into a massive budget bill late in the Obama administration, as if lawmakers wanted to acknowledge America's outlook on marijuana had changed, but not make a big deal of it.

Almost three years later, a multibillion-dollar industry and the freedom of millions to openly partake in its products without fear of federal prosecution hinge on that obscure budget clause.

But now, Congress may throw it overboard amid pressure from an attorney general who views marijuana as a dangerous menace.

What has become known as the Rohrabacher-Farr amendment constitutes a single paragraph of federal law. It prohibits the Justice Department from spending even a cent to prosecute medical marijuana users and sellers operating legally under state laws. Since its passage, it has largely shut down efforts by federal prosecutors or drug enforcement officials to interfere with otherwise legal sales of marijuana in 29 states and the District of Columbia that have passed legalization measures.

The prospect that the ban on prosecutions could expire has spread anxiety across the marijuana industry.

In California, the freedom of an attorney facing jail time for advising a marijuana operation hangs in the balance. In Washington, a pro-marijuana GOP congressman ponders whether to use the White House access he has gained to enlist President Trump's help preserving the pot amendment.

Pot sellers and patients wonder if federal raids are next.

"It is shocking to think that this is at risk," said Sarah Trumble, deputy director of social policy and politics at Third Way, a centrist think tank that advocates easing federal restrictions on cannabis.

"This would give the attorney general a blank check to go after medical marijuana. Without it, he might try, but it would be really hard for him."

The first big sign of trouble for pro-marijuana advocates came in September, when the House balked at preserving the amendment. GOP leaders refused to allow a vote on it in a committee chaired by Rep. Pete Sessions (R-Texas), who is no relation to Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions, but is as fiercely anti-marijuana.

The Senate has already reaffirmed its support for the provision in an affront to its former colleague, the Sessions who runs the Justice Department. But both houses must agree for the measure to remain in effect.

The hedging in the House followed an aggressive lobbying campaign by the attorney general, who complained in writing to lawmakers that the Rohrabacher-Farr amendment was hampering law enforcement and endangering the public.

"The Department must be in a position to use all laws available to combat the transnational drug organizations and dangerous drug traffickers who threaten American lives," Sessions wrote.

The uncertain fate of the pot provision has created tension among Republicans, dozens of whom have cast votes to prevent the federal government from a crackdown on medical marijuana. Many would like to do so again.

The most vocal is Rep. Dana Rohrabacher of Costa Mesa, the amendment's namesake, who along with former Rep. Sam Farr, a Democrat from the Central Coast, got the ban into federal statute in 2014 after trying for a decade.

That victory wasn't long ago, but came during a very different time. The Obama administration had just pledged to let states go their own way on medical and recreational pot. The measure reflected a Congress subtly backing off its war on marijuana and nudging the Justice Department to do likewise.

After it passed, Rohrabacher began calling judges to insist they dismiss cases.

"I told one of them, 'If you have in your courtroom a federal prosecutor who is now trying to convict someone for possession of medical marijuana, there is only one criminal in your courtroom, and that is the prosecutor,'" he said.

The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco last year put the Department of Justice on notice that as long as the prosecution ban is in place, marijuana charges filed against defendants operating legally under state law won't fly, at least in California and the eight other western states under the appeals court's jurisdiction, all but one of which have legalized marijuana in whole or in part.

Sessions warned in his letter to Congress that the ruling threatened to immunize drug runners and gangs.

Rohrabacher finds such claims absurd. The attorney general, he said, is out of step with the president, who has expressed support for medical marijuana. Rohrabacher insists Trump would step in to protect medical pot if someone could get him to focus on what is going on.

The congressman, who is a strong Trump supporter, is potentially a good candidate to do that. But like so many other things around pot politics — and the Trump administration -- the dynamics are complicated, and strange.

Rohrabacher said he doesn't want to "mess up ... something really important to the president" that he's working on by throwing marijuana into the mix.

Rohrabacher wants to broker a deal between the Trump administration and Julian Assange, the fugitive founder of Wikileaks. According to Rohrabacher, Assange told him he has "absolute proof" that emails stolen from Democratic operatives during last year's campaign did not come from the Russians.

"That is proof he will provide if we can work something out so Assange leaves the Ecuadorian embassy" in London, where he has taken refuge for more than five years, Rohrabacher said. Assange's evidence would "disprove the accusation that our president stole the last election in cooperation with Russia," he asserts.

Much of the rest of Washington is skeptical, and White House officials have kept Rohrabacher away from Trump.

Meantime, the dalliance with Assange isn't keeping lawmakers from working with Rohrabacher on pot. His most prominent partner is his otherwise political opposite, Rep. Earl Blumenauer, a liberal Democrat from Portland, Ore., who is co-sponsoring the latest version of the Rohrabacher amendment.

"There are dozens of Republicans who realize this is a really bad political move," Blumenauer said, referring to Sessions' effort to block the amendment.

"Marijuana got more votes than Trump. There are millions of Republicans and independents who voted for it. There are 20 million people a month who use it."

Both Blumenauer and Rohrabacher said they know how many lawmakers have reconsidered their support for the prosecution ban amid lobbying by Sessions.

"None of them," said Rohrabacher.

That's all cold comfort to Troy Dayton, co-founder of ArcView, a San Francisco group that connects deep-pocketed investors with promising cannabis startups. The prosecution ban has been a boon to business. The stalling in the House, Dayton said, was another wake-up call to the marijuana industry that anything can happen at any time.

"It was revolutionary when it passed," Dayton said of the ban. People were skeptical at first, he said, asking whether it would really halt prosecutions. "For the most part, it has," he said.

The impact if it were to vanish?

"Chilling."

Perhaps even more so for Nathan Hoffman, a lawyer facing prison time and disbarment for his role advising a large marijuana growing and sales operation that was busted in 2011. The recent court rulings give Hoffman's attorney, Ronald Richards, hope that Hoffman's law license and freedom can be saved.

"In a brief I field last night, I said why are they in a rush to disbar my client and convict him when these prosecutions are becoming archaic?" said Richards.

But if the ban goes up in smoke, that argument likely goes along with it.

Congressmen_-_Tom_Williams.jpg


News Moderator: Ron Strider 420 MAGAZINE ®
Full Article: 29 states have legal pot. Jeff Sessions wants to stamp it out, and he's closer than you think - LA Times
Author: Evan Halper
Contact: Contact Us - LA Times
Photo Credit: Tom Williams
Website: Los Angeles Times - News from the nation, world and California - Los Angeles Times
 
these politicians are laughing at the plant people.
look at them.
trying to make people believe a false narrative about a plant.
americans do not abide by this marijuana racket. jail, licenses, snoopers, spying.
americans value freedom and do not believe the fed gov (corporation) is the big daddy to the states.
this is false idea about the structure of america promoted by the fake media and schools.

same people that call the cannabis plant a "drug" are promoting this nonsense.
it's a plant. not a drug.
 
Scary shit. Because the rest of the world are now looking closely on america and the effects of the legalisation wave.

If you lose it the rest of us will never get it. The only chance for the rest of us are in the hands of you Americans right now. The tidal wave you managed to start is sweeping all the world now and for the first time in my life i have hopes of seeing legal cannabis in this part of the world in my own lifetime.

If the tidal wave is stopped in the US it stops almost everywhere

Damn it. I want to be legal
 
"legal" is just another controlled racket.
licenses, lotteries, closed systems, spying, snooping, intrusion.
legal weed is controlled from the top by a small group of racketeers.
you cannot grow your own or process or give it to sick family without a license.
the racketeers commandeered the plant and claim to own it, giving select few the right to use, under their terms.
don't wish for this. work to free the weed from all claims of ownership and control.
we don't need rackets to use the plant.
 
There's big money in cannabis.... all over the world. The ONLY reason it's not legal for recreation in the states is because BigAg and corporations haven't figured out a way to capitalize on the market and get FULL control like they did with CORN, TOBACCO, COTTON, SOY.... and many more agricultural commodities (plants) that are regulated by the federal government and that regulation FUNDED with our tax dollars.

People we PAY TAXES to the federal government so they can control plants.... this is complete craziness.

Results are a complete turnaround from obesity being 10% in 1962 to 40% in 2010. This is a complete failure.. now add in health care costs to pay for those folks that get sick that are obese ..

Then take a look at tobacco.... where did all that money go from those state lawsuits to reclaim money for people that got sick from smoking chemically laden cigarettes?

Now if that isn't enough, lets take a look at growing a plant that is considered food by just about every sane person in the world; that plant being CORN. What does our government do? They make laws to subsidize farmers to grow corn (seeds provided by BigAg) and we burn corn up as fuel when there's starvation and famine going on not to mention poverty here in the USA and around the world.

There's a tipping point to our society and a revolution will follow.

The only way to change our destiny is get out and vote... we can vote to legalize cannabis, we need to vote and get rid of the politicians that are NOT working for the people and only working for BigAg and big corporations.

VOTE and vote locally and nationally. We need to make a change. This insanity has to stop.
 
I cannot see a situation in which "Little" Jeff Sessions could get away with slowing down or even stopping the rise of cannabis use and all the industry connected with it. Besides just looking bad in the face of it, it would also look incredibly simple-minded,just think of the money. Always follow the money: Big Old Money; Big Tobacco, Big Pharma, Big Alcohol, Big Prison, all against cannabis for one reason or another....duh the money. New Money: jobs for thousands of citizens in a hundred different positions, tax money, tax money, tax money! How about the good will of the people by the outlandish use of common sense by politicians and making cannabis a Schedule 42 drug on the same level as kitty fur, vote's, vote's, vote's equates to money, money, money. And what should be first but isn't, is maybe cannabis is a medical marvel and helps people become a little healthier, lower hospital use or money, money, money.
 
As long as this jack-ass is allowed to spew lies and innuendo about marijuana,but remain completely silent on fentynal(a completely legal drug,that is deemed as medically valuable)completely ignoring all the criminal elements,misery and death this drug carries with it,we are in for a long fight.It really makes you wonder who the real criminals are here,and where the money goes,to fuel the Federal Drug Cartel.Users of fentynal are always going to need narcan to reverse their overdose,while us cannabis users only need a nights sleep,to reverse ours.#Sessions and the Feds are the real criminals.Fentynal for everyone!!
 
Very true, I have had my own run in's with fentynal, had get nasty with a Dr. who wanted to load me up with this terrible drug. The same hospital sent an administrator to my room to find out why I was upset. Seems this hospital was receiving federal funds and would not or could not talk about cannabis as an alternative. Please government leave me alone, call me up if and when North Korea invades Nevada other than that go away.
 
Unfortunately as long as cannabis from states where it is produced legally continues to flood into states where it is still illegal the Feds and Jeff Sessions arguments will only gain support. It doesn't help anyone when large shipments of cannabis get seized leaving states like Colorado headed for places like Georgia.
 
Well. That's of course never gonna end because people in non legal states wants pot too.
 
how are the people in the "illegal" states supposed to get it then if it's not shipped? if you buy into the legal-illegal racket, you're part of it. Jeff Sessions and his crew don't care about what the people in the states want, via voting. voting is another fraud. apparently there are no real crimes to solve, so these jokers have to busy themselves destroying sick & free people.

Here's a question I've asked the author and got no reply: why does 420 mag call cannabis plant a "drug"? it's a plant, please explain, 420 mag.
 
bbrown, all voting in the US is compromised. sorry to say, but voting will not change anything. see these documentaries: Hacking Democracy and Invisible Ballots. please stop drumming business for the fake voting racket. these devils don't count our votes and do what we say at all. to believe or promote voting is working with those deceiving us. time to stop.
 
Most states that remain in a prohibition have a long and fine heritage of under ground pot cultivation and that's how people in those states get it! Just like the way it was procured in all states before legalization. My only point was these politicians use interstate trafficking bust and statistics to prop up there argument. That's my only point!
 
bbrown, all voting in the US is compromised. sorry to say, but voting will not change anything. see these documentaries: Hacking Democracy and Invisible Ballots. please stop drumming business for the fake voting racket. these devils don't count our votes and do what we say at all. to believe or promote voting is working with those deceiving us. time to stop.

Voting is our civic duty... what's done with my vote after its cast, I have no control over but I do have control of the lever in the ballot box. Get enough folks pissed off due to election fraud and we have a revolution. Just history repeating and people never learning from experience.

Einstein said "The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result."

Why do you think all the suburban police departments are armed to the teeth even have armored vehicles now to prepare for the inevitable? Why do the local suburban police need Armour??

Not for some sick ass psycho with an automatic weapon....no it's for when the poor impoverished finally stand up and DEMAND freedom and equality. It's coming....
 
There's big money in cannabis.... all over the world. The ONLY reason it's not legal for recreation in the states is because BigAg and corporations haven't figured out a way to capitalize on the market and get FULL control like they did with CORN, TOBACCO, COTTON, SOY.... and many more agricultural commodities (plants) that are regulated by the federal government and that regulation FUNDED with our tax dollars.

People we PAY TAXES to the federal government so they can control plants.... this is complete craziness.

Results are a complete turnaround from obesity being 10% in 1962 to 40% in 2010. This is a complete failure.. now add in health care costs to pay for those folks that get sick that are obese ..

Then take a look at tobacco.... where did all that money go from those state lawsuits to reclaim money for people that got sick from smoking chemically laden cigarettes?

Now if that isn't enough, lets take a look at growing a plant that is considered food by just about every sane person in the world; that plant being CORN. What does our government do? They make laws to subsidize farmers to grow corn (seeds provided by BigAg) and we burn corn up as fuel when there's starvation and famine going on not to mention poverty here in the USA and around the world.

There's a tipping point to our society and a revolution will follow.

The only way to change our destiny is get out and vote... we can vote to legalize cannabis, we need to vote and get rid of the politicians that are NOT working for the people and only working for BigAg and big corporations.

VOTE and vote locally and nationally. We need to make a change. This insanity has to stop.

Amen to that!
 
Here's a question I've asked the author and got no reply: why does 420 mag call cannabis plant a "drug"? it's a plant, please explain, 420 mag.

Lots of plants are also drugs, even though mostly in modern society the word drug either refers to a pharmaceutical, or a illegal substance.

By definition though, many plants are drugs as they have an affect on the human body. Coffee is a drug. Opium is a drug, cannabis is a drug, echanacia is a drug, aloe is a drug and the list goes on....

A drug simply means you use it orally, ingest it, smoke it, topically use it and it causes some effect to the body...

Yes, marijuana is a plant, but, the word plant is not synonymous with the word harmless. There are a lot of harmful plants and deadly plants that you would not want to touch, eat, smoke or other... So simply because it is a plant, really means nothing in terms of toxicology.

I love cannabis, but disagree when people use the rhetoric "its a plant man"... so is belladonnas, nightshade or hemlock, oleander, and other very harmful plants are also "plants".
 
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