Medical Marijuana Seller Faces Prison in Washington, Where Pot Is Legal
Lance Gloor, whose crimes are the same as those committed by hundreds of uncharged dispensary operators, could get up to 35 years.

In a recent Forbes column, I described the limitations of the Rohrabacher-Farr amendment, a spending rider aimed at preventing the Justice Department from interfering with the implementation of state medical marijuana laws. A trial that continues today at the federal courthouse in Tacoma illustrates one of those limitations: U.S. attorneys may claim the medical marijuana suppliers they choose to prosecute are not complying with state law, and that claim can be difficult to refute when the law is hazy, as it is in Washington.
Thanks to a federal indictment that was filed under seal in 2013 and made public in 2014, Lance Gloor faces up to 35 years in prison for operating medical marijuana dispensaries in Lacey and the Key Peninsula. Like hundreds of other dispensaries that have been openly serving patients in Washington for years, those outlets identified themselves as "access points" for "collective gardens." Under a 2011 law, such gardens are limited to 10 patients each and may grow no more than 45 plants at a time. By channeling the produce of many such gardens and treating customers (each of whom is supposed to have a recommendation from a "health care professional") as temporary members of those collectives, dispensaries arguably complied with the letter of the law. But that interpretation is controversial, especially since the "collective garden" provision was not intended to authorize dispensaries, which were addressed by a separate provision that the governor vetoed.
On October 24, Gloor's lawyer, Karen Unger, asked U.S. District Judge Ronald Leighton to dismiss the case against him, arguing that it is barred by the Rohrabacher-Farr amendment. She cited an October 19 decision by Charles Breyer, a federal judge in California who ruled that the rider prohibits the Justice Department from enforcing an injunction against the Marin Alliance for Medical Marijuana (MAMM) "to the extent that MAMM operates in compliance with California law." According to Gloor, this was the first time Breyer's ruling was cited in a criminal case, although other defendants—including former Morro Bay, California, dispensary operator Charles Lynch and the Washington medical marijuana patients known as the Kettle Falls Five—have cited the Rohrabacher-Farr amendment in an attempt to escape federal marijuana charges. So far those efforts have been unsuccessful, and so was Gloor's, which is why he is currently on trial.
Gloor is charged with manufacturing marijuana, conspiracy to distribute marijuana, and conspiracy to commit money laundering. It's pretty clear he is guilty of all those things, but so are many other Washington dispensary operators, few of whom have been prosecuted under federal law. Gloor is also charged with possession of a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime, which carries a five-year mandatory minimum sentence. Any dispensary operator who owns a gun could be charged with the same offense.
Two of Gloor's business associates, James Lucas and Matthew Roberts, pleaded guilty and agreed to testify against him. In her motion to dismiss, Unger noted that the operators of "over 300 medical marijuana dispensaries in the state of Washington" have not been arrested or prosecuted, "despite the fact that their operations are identical to those allegedly operated by [Gloor, Lucas, and Roberts]." With the "collective garden" provision set to expire in July, many of those entrepreneurs are vying for new state licenses authorized by a medical marijuana law enacted last spring. Those who are successful will join more than 200 marijuana merchants licensed by the state under Initiative 502, which legalized marijuana for recreational use. In this context, trying to put Gloor in prison for decades seems like an outrageous example of selective prosecution.
Addendum: Unlike other federal trials of medical marijuana growers or distributors (including the Kettle Falls Five), Gloor's has featured explicit discussion of medical use. "The whole thing has been about medical marijuana," Gloor reports via Facebook. "The prosecutor couldn't put on a case without it being about [medical marijuana] because all the evidence and video is from medical dispensaries. The witnesses are all former medical store employees, so the whole case has been about the process of how patients get into the stores and paperwork [is] filled out. The DEA witnesses even are calling it medical marijuana on the stand and couldn't get into the stores until they went and got their medical cards. It's amazing." In a ruling prior to the trial, Judge Leighton said the defense would be allowed to present evidence regarding the nature of the businesses Gloor managed "to the extent it does not direct the jury that compliance (or intended compliance) with state law is a defense for alleged violations of federal law."
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State level "legalization" as flypaper for federal authorities.
Honey pot, as it were.
So, what they're saying is, it's "safer" to sell on a Tor Hidden Service Marketplace even when it's "legal".
http://bit.ly/1Zn2aLo/
Try this
https://goo.gl/SGbjfj
Oh shit - David Bowie died.
At least we still have...*sigh*. Never mind.
All the people I grew up listening to are dying off. I feel old.
A lot of the people I grew up listening to started out dead.
Golden Years
Damn. I'll have to pay his Earthling record in remembrance.
It sucks. Bowie was a class act and a phenomenal artist.
Very sad. But at least we still have Lou Reed
When will he finally die?
My BIL saw Bowie live on his Ziggy Stardust tour. I'm sure he's bummed today.
Agreed. Bowie kicked ass.
The federal drug war is the result of progressive interpretations of the commerce clause during FDR's term.
This is all on you progressives and your adoration of the centralized socialist state.
No, it is really just an extension of the original Progressive cause of alcohol prohibition. The feds got into the drug prohibition business in the early 20th Century.
Outrageous examples of selective prosecution are how America works, baby.
Unless, as Hyperbolical (wadair) points out in the ranchers post, you can use previous injustices to justify a current one. In that case its consistency all the way down.
If only you racist bastards had been willing to elect Obama President this sort of thing would not be happening.
Can Congress just pass a law allowing minorities and proggies to smoke pot, while still keeping it illegal for Republicans and white men, and just be done with it already?
Yeah, we need to just give people "get out of jail free cards" for being from the right group or holding the proper political views. Lets not waste LEO assets on anyone but the people who deserve it.
When will the trend pass of everyone on Facebook echoing obituaries? I can read the obituaries myself. And it's not like anyone I knew, knew Bowie. When someone has a personal memory to share it might actually be worth posting.
No it won't anymore than the trend of people you know going up to you and saying "hey did you hear so and so died?". Facebook is just a digital water cooler in that sense.
Predictable (and predicted by me and others here). If it's still illegal under federal law, it's still illegal. Now we get arbitrary enforcement about disfavored individuals.
While I support the Re-Legalization of Cannabis 100% I always thought that these dispensary operators were scamming the MedMJ program, and I am a MedMJ patient. Allow Adults to grow what they want to grow, license and regulate all sales.
license and regulate all sales.
Why?
With the "collective garden" provision set to expire in July, many of those entrepreneurs are vying for new state licenses authorized by a medical marijuana law enacted last spring.
You have to scratch, fight and shove other people out of the way if you want your libertarian moment here.
"Legalizing" means more laws to break.
Think any members of the trial jury ever heard of this most interesting of concepts, the concept of Jury Nullification, the application of which seems all to appropriate here.
Federal tyranny writ large. FedGov have NO authority under the Constitition to deal on any level with what we put into pour bodies. FedGov need to butt out. WHERE are the sheriffs involved in this case? They need to interpose between their State laws, and the illegal Fed laws.
Legalize it and we won't have these sort of problems 🙂
Mike @ http://www.marijuanaseedsavings.com
If I am not mistaken cocaine and heroin were banned in the early 20th Century. In the 19th Century opiates and cocaine were pretty common. They were one of the first casualties of the original Progressive cause of Prohibition.
Heroin officially banned in 1924, but regulation started in 1914.
In the Victorian era, a best-selling brand of opium was called "Quiet Child".
It all ballooned when federal dollars started getting handed out. Everybody wanted on the money train.
If I lived in Pennsylvania I'd find his grave site and piss on it.
Anslinger not FDR
Come on, you chicken. Here's FDR's final resting place in Hyde Park, NY. Make us proud.
Also, pics or it didn't happen.