Congresswoman Pushes Back Against DEA Attacks on Medical Marijuana
Letter to Attorney General Eric Holder opposes threats to dispensary landlordsWashington, DC -- Congresswoman Lois Capps (D-CA) sent a letter
Friday to incoming U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder decrying threats
by the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and the U.S. Attorney's
Office against property owners that lease to state-sanctioned medical
marijuana providers. Since the summer of 2007, the DEA has issued
letters to at least 300 landlords in California threatening federal
criminal prosecution and asset forfeiture if they continue to lease to
medical marijuana dispensaries. However, the Department of Justice
(DOJ) had
never acted on the DEA threats until recently when property owners in
Capps' district of Santa Barbara received an ultimatum on January 7th -
evict their tenants within 45 days, by February 21st, or face the
consequences.
Friday's letter from Rep. Capps is "urging the Department of Justice,
Office of the United States Attorney, to act swiftly to suspend the
enforcement threats against the property owners in California who are
in compliance with local and state law." The same medical marijuana
dispensaries being threatened with closure by the DOJ have been
licensed under a local ordinance adopted by the City of Santa Barbara
earlier in 2008. Yet, since the DOJ letters were first sent in 2007,
most of the
dispensaries in Santa Barbara have been evicted by threatened landlords
or have closed voluntarily to avoid possible legal ramifications.
"We applaud Representative Capps' leadership in opposing DEA
intimidation," said Caren Woodson, Director of Government Affairs with
Americans for Safe Access, the medical marijuana advocacy organization
that worked with Rep. Capps on the letter to Holder. "Given public
statements by President Obama about changing the medical marijuana
policy at the Department of Justice, these recent actions are
unnecessarily harmful and completely indefensible." When campaigning
for president, Senator Obama repeatedly stated in public that he was
"not going to be using Justice Department resources to try to
circumvent state laws on this issue." The White House affirmed this
position in a February 5th statement to the Washington Times.
In defiance of President Obama's position on the use of Justice
Department funds to enforce federal marijuana laws in medical marijuana
states, the DEA has conducted several raids on dispensaries since the
president's inauguration on January 20th. "It's unclear why the DEA and
the U.S. Attorney's Office is continuing the outdated policies of the
Bush Administration," continued Woodson. "But, the newly-seated
Attorney General has the power to, and should, immediately suspend all
medical marijuana enforcement efforts."
Advocates estimate that approximately 400 dispensaries help provide
medical marijuana to a majority of the more than 200,000 qualified
patients in California. In August of 2008, State Attorney General Jerry
Brown issued guidelines recognizing the legality of medical marijuana
dispensaries and offered a set of recommendation for how such
facilities could comply with state law. In 2005, the California Board
of Equalization began collecting tax on the sale of medical marijuana,
a revenue source for the state budget estimated by ASA at more than
$100 million.
Further information:
Rep. Capps' letter to Eric Holder:
http://AmericansForSafeAccess.org/downloads/Capps_Letter_to_Holder_2-13-09.pdf
Recent White House statement on ending federal enforcement:
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2009/feb/05/dea-led-by-bush-continues-pot-raids/
January 7th Justice Department letter to landlords:
http://AmericansForSafeAccess.org/downloads/DOJ_Letter_01-07-09.pdf
CA Attorney General Guidelines issued in August 2008:
http://www.AmericansForSafeAccess.org/downloads/AG_Guidelines.pdf
ASA Fact Sheet on medical marijuana sales tax:
http://AmericansForSafeAccess.org/downloads/sales_tax_fact_sheet.pdf


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