Federal Drug Laws Force Pot Shops To Carry Lots of Cash and No Insurance. Now They're Getting Robbed.
Despite state legalization, federal prohibition makes break-ins harder on marijuana shops and manufacturers.

Multiple Bay Area retailers have been hit by smash-and-grab robberies in recent weeks. Cannabis businesses have been among the hardest hit, especially those in Oakland. To make matters worse, these cannabis retailers have been further disadvantaged thanks to misguided federal drug laws.
Cannabis is legal in California but illegal under federal law. As a result, most Golden State cannabis businesses struggle to secure business services like banking and insurance. Without access to banking services, and unable to take checks, debit cards, or credit cards, these businesses are forced to operate cash-only, which makes them appealing targets for robbers. And without insurance, a business will necessarily face additional difficulties when it is robbed.
Take the case of Alphonso "Tucky" Blunt Jr., the owner and operator of Blunts and Moore, a retail cannabis business that opened in Oakland in 2018. The store was granted a license as part of the city's Equity Permit Program, which reserves half of all cannabis business licenses for applicants who either have a marijuana conviction or live in certain heavily policed areas.
In addition to his staff, Blunt employs three armed guards, both to protect the store and to provide escort anytime an employee needs to travel with cash. If a traditional business needs to pay a bill, it could make an electronic payment, or get a certified check through its bank. But for a cannabis business that lacks access to bank services, a simple task requires needless complexity: In Blunt's case, just paying the store's monthly rent involves carrying cash to several different post offices to buy money orders, since each post office has a daily dollar limit for money order purchases. While Blunt says most cannabis businesses do not carry "an abundance of cash" on hand, he recognizes that most people do not know that, which makes stores like his an attractive target for thieves.
And because many of the big names in insurance steer clear of businesses that sell marijuana, Blunt says, retailers like his are forced to turn to newer, less reliable insurance outfits that force customers to "jump through every hoop possible" to get reimbursed. For example, after his store was robbed last summer, Blunt says, his insurance only paid $26,000 of an estimated $1 million (perhaps even more) in damages.
That level of coverage is simply unsustainable for some cannabis businesses. Eduardo Whittington is the founder of Lobo Cannagar, a pre-roll blunt and joint manufacturer headquartered in Oakland. On November 28, more than a dozen masked intruders broke into and robbed the shared work facility that Lobo Cannagar uses for manufacturing.
Whittington carries no insurance on the facility. He says he opted to go without it based on the many hassles and bad deals others in the industry had received. "The juice isn't worth the squeeze," he explains. Had Whittington sold alcohol or tobacco, or any other federally approved product instead of weed, he would have had no problem insuring his facility. But because he's in the legal marijuana business, which the federal government continues to frown on, Whittington is now on the hook for the full costs of the crimes committed against him and his company. The recent robbery could cost hundreds of thousands of dollars.
These problems are not new, nor are they limited to Oakland. Even when cannabis businesses find banks willing to work with them, the business owners are reluctant to name the banks publicly, for fear that the federal government will pressure the bank to close the accounts. Both this year and in 2019, the House of Representatives has passed versions of the Secure and Fair Enforcement (SAFE) Banking Act, which would loosen the requirements that disincentivize banks from taking marijuana businesses as clients. But even under Democratic control, it has stalled in the Senate, leaving hopeful cannabis businesses in the lurch.
Robberies and break-ins are an unfortunate risk for any business, but when that business involves marijuana, federal criminalization compounds the damage caused. There is a simple solution: The federal government should stop criminalizing marijuana, and allow cannabis businesses to compete in an open market just like any other.
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>>hit by smash-and-grab robberies in recent weeks.
Newsom toadies
Last time that I was smashed, I was NOT grabbed by ANY of the hottest babes!!! I feel ROBBED, dammit! WHAT is the ACLU gonna do for MEEEE?!?!?
The old Once-ler still lives here. Ask him. He knows.
Flag for the TDS-addled spastic shit-pile! Fuck off and die.
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Check it out - Former Philly Mayor Michael Nutter (hardly a right winger), tears into current DA Larry Krasner.
"Krasner portrays himself as the Great White Hope for Philadelphia’s Black and brown communities, but if he actually cared about us, he’d understand that the homicide crisis is what is plaguing us the most."
That was blunt
Nutter had a kush job.
>>the homicide crisis
now beginning it's sixth consecutive decade
Philly has more homicides that any other city than Chicago.
From ABCNews
Philadelphia, a city of roughly 1.5 million people, has had more homicides this year (521 as of Dec. 6) than the nation's two largest cities, New York (443 as of Dec. 5) and Los Angeles (352 as of Nov. 27). That's an increase of 13% from 2020, a year that nearly broke the 1990 record.
Flyers haven't won a game since the Lambda variant, either
and I hear that Gritty hasn't been vaxxed.
is okay he's fully masked when at work.
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Multiple Bay Area retailers have been hit by smash-and-grab robberies in recent weeks.
Oh, bullshit. The idea that these organized gangs of thieves exist are just some sort of Republican/white supremacist/capitalist dog whistle, AOC has already exposed the lie. And even if they did, people are simply stealing high-end Gucci bags and flat-screen TV's and pot in order to feed their starving children when they can't find jobs because some bastards have greedily taken 5 or 6 jobs for themselves. Also racism.
"Also racism." ?!?!
Mighty Whitey up-tighties of yew!!!
You forgot sexism and anti-LGBTWXHSD-ism-asm, which flaunts yer benighted, backwards, hickabilly, deplorable status! If'n ye want to be TRULY Anointed like MEEEE, ye will go BACK to PC school, and LEARN how to be Truly Advanced and Non-Judgmental, especially concerning those of Alternative Ethics, with respect to Smash-and-Grab tactics, which merely serve to equalize the WEALTH, dudes, dudettes, and dudeinxes!!!
They're, they're, now!!!
Fucking TDS-addled spastic asshole gets a flag. Stuff it up your ass.
GFY, spastic one. You should find a another hobby other than thread-shitting.
At least California will step up to arrest and prosecute the robbers and keep them off the streets, right?
Only if they loot over $950 in pot. Even then, no cash bail when they are busted. Also, endoess social services to make it easy for looters to live in the streets and keep no fixed address.
Fake news. California's AG has assured us there is no crime in his state.
a pre-roll blunt and joint manufacturer
Get a load of this guy, getting all white-privilege-y with his 'deconstructed marijuana cigarette' business.
If'n I may be blunt, this is a case of the pot calling the kettle stoned! EVERYBODY must get stoned! I have joined together with Cheech and Chong, AND Steve Martin-went-a-Fartin', to issue this joint statement: ( https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FYbavuReVF4 )
Let's get small!!!! JOINT me & my favorite honky!!! We can hash out our differences, if'n only we joint together!
Fucking TDS-addled spastic asshole gets a flag. Stuff it up your ass.
Quit taking pot shots at him! We need to nip that in the bud!
On a serious note, state and federal policies need to be better coordinated so they can take joint action.
Frequent robberies in California are not the result of federal anti marijuana laws, they are the result of public policy in California.
It's both/and. The State negligence to prosecute make crime in general attractive and Federal anti-marijuana laws makes looting pot dispensaries especially attractive.
Folks trying to snuff out this budding industry.
"Hairy Pothead and the Bowl of Fire" has already "smoked out" your subversive intentions! Joke Rawling (as assisted by Jiggly Huff-and-Puff, of the School of Huffing and Puffing) wrote about you and your Draconian Malfodorous ways, so we are already ON to your Hoggish, Wartly ways!!!
Fuck off and die, TDS-addled spastic asshole.
The War on (Some) Drugs is a War to Make The World Safe For Alcoholism and Chawin' Terbacky!
>>"Hairy Pothead and the Bowl of Fire"
hilarious.
https://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0978402006/reasonmagazinea-20/
Read and heed!!!
can't believe I didn't write that lol.
Fuck off and die, TDS-addled spastic asshole.
Qannabbi sounds like a gqme that QAnoners should play.
No one with a good buzz on from Qannabbi would get off the couch to make fruitless pilgrimages to see the Second Coming of JFKJr. and his St. Peter TheOrangeMan.
Also, fans of Qannabbi would never shoot up pizza parlors and make death threats against Medical personnel giving children vaccines.
If anything, they'd want Chuck E. Cheese open so they can take the kiddies to the arcade, sh9tgun a big spliff discretely taken away from everybody in the parking lot, then get their munchies on and laugh like Hell at those singing giant rats!
Or am I engaged in a "No True Potsman" Fallacy? 😉
of COURSE nyone working at such a place would NOT be able to keep a handy dandy theft reduction tool (firearm) handy enough to make a difference, as Fed law prohibits possession of firearms by those "unlawful users" of any "controlled substance". So they ust hire armed guards, whoch are rahter dear. Furhte,r "hirelings" will never protect as well as those with vested interests.
One posssible way around the banking shut-out meme would be to own the business as a sole proprietorship, then simply open a perosnal account at a credit untion, always far more friendly than the bigbox banks.
Pay all the bills from that account, and drop the greenbacks in thourgh an ATM.
This situation is ridiculous. FedGov tyranny at its finest.......
Even sole proprietorship isn't good, since the proprietor has unlimited personal liability, such as from a slip-and-fall customer (very likely possibility in a pot business.) Whereas with an L.L.C., or Incorporation, the business liability and individual liability are (in principle, separate.
Again, no half-assed decriminalization or State measures. Either full legalization everywhere in the U.S. A. or pot businesses are just a *ahem!* pipe dream.
Seems as if the feds and the several states badly need to talk with each other on this drugs business.
But it's okay for the same companies to deny services to companies because of their politics.
Very good point. Politics should be added to the list of protected classes so conservatives can sue when they get fired by leftist bosses. That'd make it fair.
No, the factual wording is "Cannabis is illegal in California under federal law." Things that are illegal under federal law are illegal in California (and every other state and territory of the US) regardless of what California law says.
Similarly we see:
Which to be factual needs to be re-worded "But because he's in the marijuana business, which the federal government continues to outlaw,"
He is not in the "legal marijuana business", because there is no such thing in the United States. The federal government does not merely "frown on" it, it has outlawed it.
Everything else in the article is fine, but those statements are a blatant misstatement of reality.
It is legal in those states unless you are in a Federal building with your pot.
In my state, I can walk through the middle of town with my medical weed twirled on my fingertips, wave at every cop I see or whatever I want so long as I'm not publicly smoking.
States can and do pass laws contrary to the fed. Part of our governing system.
No, it isn't "legal in those states unless you are in a Federal building with your pot." The combination of Federal statute and the Supreme Court ruling in Gonzales v. Raich does not limit the criminalization of marijuana to Federal land; the prohibition applies everywhere in the United States.
Misunderstandings like yours are exactly why the false claim that there's anywhere in the US with legal marijuana needs to be avoided by journalists.
There is currently a temporary ban on using Federal funds to enforce Federal marijuana law in states where marijuana is not outlawed by state law. If that is ever not renewed, the DEA will be free to swoop in on all these so-called "legal marijuana" businesses and arrest everyone involved in the businesses on distribution and conspiracy to distribute charges. And they'll be able to go back five years based on the statute of limitations; ex post facto will not apply because everyone involved is currently violating Federal law.
If you somehow imagine the DEA wouldn't take the opportunity to arrest everybody involved in these businesses (and seize all their assets) going back five years the moment they can, you have a lot more trust in the sense of fair play among narcs than anyone sane does.
Do they at least file 5th amendment tax returns?
Only if they want to go to prison for tax evasion as well a pot law violations., just like Robert Clarkson, Irwin Schiff, and others in the "Tax Patriots" Movement.
Don't get me wrong, I wish the "Tax Patriots" were right, but Realz Before Feelz, getting rid of the Income Tax monster is going to require repealing the 16th Amendment.
No, I mean filing a 5th amendment return rather than saying on the tax return that you got income from federal crimes. What Al Capone needed to do to not go to prison.
It doesn't necessarily get you out of showing income, but it keeps you from having to show how you made your money.
https://scholarworks.law.ubalt.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1443&context=ublr for analysis.
Federal Drug Laws Force Pot Shops To Carry Lots of Cash and No Insurance. Now They're Getting Robbed.
Despite state legalization, federal prohibition makes break-ins harder on marijuana shops and manufacturers.
What I said months ago, which is what a relative in the 0acific Northwest told me years ago.
Decriminalization is a half-assed measure and anything just on the State level is a half-assed measure too. Either full-bore legalization from sea to shining sea or pot business will still have pariah status and be beyond the protection provided by insurance and banking.
Further, the states' 'legalization' is so loaded with regulation that the black market remains the major supplier.
If I bought dope, I'd go to the 'I know a guy' instead of the 'legal' outlet and cheat the state out of the taxes as an additional benefit.
While the risk costs are built into the price, the dope black market remains one of the true free markets available to us; fuck Tony with turd's dick.
True. But still, being black market means no effective quality control of the product, either by voluntary action of suppliers and dealers, or courts to litigate disputes.
Until full legalization takes place, the safest status in "The War on (Some) Drugs" is to be an armed and neutral one-person Switzerland, neither dealing nor using drugs nor snitching on or interfering with those who do.
Public product has surpassed the black market in quality and price where I'm at for some years now.
Several of the dope-shops have visible armed security, but CA law does not allow for use of firearms in property crimes.
Pretty sure the perps know that; dunno if the guards are trained to arm-tackle the perps.
Of course they're not allowed, someone might get hurt in the mostly peaceful process of personally claiming reparations for being a disadvantaged minority. Bigot.
I stand exposed! (sob)