The War on Weed Continues in California, Which Supposedly Legalized Marijuana Six Years Ago
Federal and state agencies are busting unlicensed marijuana merchants, who face decades in prison.

According to a recent press release from the U.S. Department of Justice, Californians can sleep a little easier thanks to the brave work of federal and local cops who dismantled a criminal organization in San Diego County. Ryan L. Korner, the special agent in charge of the IRS-Criminal Investigation office in Los Angeles, says the gangsters who pleaded guilty to federal felonies last week didn't care "how their actions negatively impact innocent people, the community, or our society." Chula Vista Police Chief Roxana Kennedy says such criminals "pose a significant health and safety hazard to the public, especially our youth."
But not to worry. Kelly A. Martinez, undersheriff of the San Diego County Sheriff's Department, declares that "East San Diego County is safer today because of this hard work." Stacey Moy, the special agent in charge at the FBI's San Diego field office, wants you to know that "the FBI is committed to keeping our communities safe from the vast array of violent crimes and criminal activity which accompanies these illegal establishments."
What did "these illegal establishments" do? They sold marijuana, a business that California supposedly legalized six years ago.
The cannabis industry, of course, remains completely illegitimate in the eyes of the federal government. That means anyone who grows or distributes marijuana in California, even with the state's approval, is committing federal felonies every day. But even though President Joe Biden wants to keep it that way, he has promised not to interfere with states that reject marijuana prohibition. So why are the feds not only busting marijuana merchants in California but doing so in collaboration with local law enforcement agencies?
The explanation, as you may have surmised, is that these particular marijuana merchants were breaking state law as well as federal law. Their businesses were not just "illegal" but also "unlicensed." Yet the fact that unlicensed pot dealers continue to thrive in California is testimony to the ways in which the state has botched legalization. Most local governments do not allow recreational sales, and even those that do frequently impose caps that artificially limit the supply. Bureaucratic barriers, costly regulations, and high taxes are daunting deterrents for weed dealers who otherwise might be inclined to go legit.
Those burdens, combined with local bans, explain why unlicensed sales still account for about two-thirds of the marijuana purchased in California. As a recent report from Reason Foundation (which publishes Reason) notes, California has one licensed recreational outlet per 29,282 residents, compared to one per 13,838 in Colorado and one per 6,145 in Oregon. Worse, the report adds, California's stores are distributed unevenly across the state, leading to "massive cannabis deserts" where "consumers have no access to a legal retailer within a reasonable distance of their home."
Instead of addressing those problems, California officials are cracking down on marijuana suppliers who fail to get the government's permission to sell pot, even when such permission is difficult or impossible to obtain. And they are waging that war on weed with the help of federal agencies that view every marijuana business, licensed or not, as a criminal enterprise.
Last Thursday, the Justice Department reports, Shahram Sheikhan and Sabriana Williams pleaded guilty to participating in a marijuana distribution conspiracy. Sheikhan faces "forty years in prison with a mandatory minimum sentence of five years and a $5 million fine." Williams faces "twenty years in prison and a $1 million fine." Their convictions were part of "an ongoing investigation by federal and state authorities targeting unlicensed, illegal marijuana dispensaries throughout Southern California."
From 2019 to 2022, the Justice Department says, "Sheikhan and Williams, along with others, operated an unlicensed, illegal marijuana business known as 'Cannaland,' which functioned primarily as a wholesale supplier of marijuana and marijuana products to unlicensed and illegal marijuana dispensaries in Southern California. Additionally, Cannaland operated as an unlicensed, illegal marijuana dispensary in its own right, serving individual customers."
In addition to Sheikhan and Williams, two other groups of California marijuana distributors recently pleaded guilty to federal drug trafficking, money laundering, and firearm charges. They face maximum prison sentences ranging from 20 years to life and maximum fines ranging from $1 million to $5 million.
Lance Kachi "admitted to operating multiple unlicensed, illegal marijuana dispensaries in Spring Valley and El Cajon." Kachi, Michael Yono, Avrin Yakou, and Fabian Yakou "oversaw multiple unlicensed dispensaries that would each generate up to $25,000 daily, and were open 24 hours a day, seven days a week." Four brothers—Sean, Alvin, Vincent, and Andrew Shamoun—pleaded guilty to operating Babylon's Garden, which "manufactured a variety of marijuana products at a warehouse in San Diego" and distributed them to "unlicensed, illegal marijuana dispensaries from Los Angeles to San Diego."
But for the lack of licenses and Kachi's unusually convenient hours, neither of which makes any difference under federal law, all that is par for the course in California's cannabis industry. If the Biden administration decided to enforce the Controlled Substances Act more aggressively, licensed marijuana merchants across the state could likewise find themselves looking at decades in federal prison.
San Diego Police Chief David Nisleit is "proud of the work that has been done to close these illegal distribution centers and stop the violent crime associated with them." But despite that claim and Moy's reference to a "the vast array of violent crimes" that "accompanies these illegal establishments," none of these defendants was charged with predatory crimes of any sort.
The reason some of them had guns seems clear from a detail that the Justice Department presents as damning. After police seized "five firearms" while executing a search warrant at Cannaland's shop in Spring Valley last year, "Sheikhan and Williams personally coordinated and facilitated the procurement of replacement firearms for the business' armed security guards."
Like many licensed marijuana dealers, in other words, Sheikhan and Williams worried that their business was a tempting target for robbers. Continued federal prohibition magnifies that risk by making it difficult for marijuana businesses, licensed or not, to obtain banking services, which forces them to rely heavily on cash. If anything, it seems, these defendants were potential victims of "violent crimes" rather than perpetrators of them.
Even the defensive possession of firearms, ordinarily protected by the Second Amendment, becomes a crime if your business involves a psychoactive substance that Congress has arbitrarily banned. Kachi, for example, was charged with "possession of a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime," a federal felony that is punishable by a mandatory minimum sentence of five years. When someone has previously been convicted of that offense, the mandatory minimum is 25 years.
Again, Kachi's lack of a business license is irrelevant under federal law. A licensed marijuana merchant who dares to arm himself against the risk of robbery is guilty of the same offense.
Just as armed self-defense is a crime for anyone in the marijuana industry, ordinary business transactions are federal felonies. Kachi was charged with money laundering, which by itself is punishable by up to 20 years in prison, plus "a fine of $500,000 or twice the value of the monetary instrument or funds involved."
To show us how nefarious Kachi's activities were, the Justice Department emphasizes that he took in lots of cash. "Kachi and his coconspirators grossed millions of dollars in revenue," it says. "Several times a week, Kachi and others would meet at various hotels where they would spend hours counting hundreds of thousands of dollars in dispensary proceeds using automated money counters. Before leaving the room with bags of money, the defendants would pack up their money counters as well as the various notes they took to account for their profits and expenses, such as the cost of armed security." Moy observes that "the primary motivation of drug traffickers is greed."
A profit motive is by no means unique to unlicensed marijuana businesses, and neither are bags of money. Due to the dearth of banking services, duly licensed pot dealers in California and other states commonly operate this way. Like Kachi, all of them are guilty of money laundering.
Kennedy claims these operations posed a threat to "our youth." While unauthorized pot shops may be less punctilious about checking customers' IDs than licensed retailers are, the Justice Department's announcement does not include any allegations of distribution to minors. The closest it comes is Kennedy's complaint that "many" unlicensed pot stores have "open[ed] up near our schools," which may mean they were closer than the 1,000 feet mandated by the city.
Kennedy also says "illegal marijuana dispensaries have been responsible for numerous complaints by our community members," although she does not specify the nature of those complaints. In 2020, when Chula Vista cracked down on unlicensed dispensaries, Kennedy said some "sold cannabis to children" or were selling "unregulated products that contained banned chemicals," according to The San Diego Union-Tribune.
These are legitimate concerns. But the best way to address them is by making it easier to sell marijuana legally. The greater the black market's share of marijuana sales, the greater the potential for underage purchases or tainted products.
Chula Vista did not start accepting applications from would-be recreational retailers until 2018. The first such business, Grasshopper Delivery, opened in 2020. It has since been joined by several others. But the city caps the number of dispensaries at 12, or about one per 23,000 residents. That's a bit better than the statewide average but clearly less than the adult market can bear. The situation in San Diego is even worse: The city allows no more than 36 recreational dispensaries, or about one per 39,000 residents. And even without such restrictions, high taxes and burdensome regulations make it very difficult for licensed shops to compete with the black market.
Even as the Justice Department implies that unlicensed marijuana dealers pose a special threat to public safety, it complains that the federal government is not getting its cut of their profits. "All the various defendants," it says, "admitted that they had an obligation to report their income" to the IRS "as well as pay taxes on any income derived from these illegal businesses, which they failed to do." As compensation for that failure, the defendants "agreed to forfeit seized cash, which currently exceeds $5 million." Uncle Sam is perfectly happy to make money from this obviously iniquitous business, as long as the cash is laundered by self-righteous rhetoric.
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I would say "Fuck Joe Biden", but I don't find him attractive at all.
You don't have to be the perpetrator. You can simply wish it on him.
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Someone would have to be the fucker, I wouldn't wish that on anyone, not even on Bernie Sanders.
Admiral Levine can fuck Joe Biden. BTW Fuck Joe Biden. The sick old pervert is now proposing to cut funding for lunch programs in schools that don't toe the line on the trans agenda.
https://thepostmillennial.com/biden-admin-quietly-links-school-lunch-funding-to-implementation-of-trans-kids-agenda.
It's not an accident that the most liberal, progressive state in the union runs it's legalized marijuana regime like this. So when someone from this same state comes knocking on your door, holding a clipboard with an "upzoning" plan for your neighborhood, slam the door in his face, you're not going to find a left/libertarian alliance pony at the bottom of the manure pile.
Oddly enough it seems that WA is doing a good job with pot. I never would have believed that the idiots running this state wouldn’t fuck it up, but there’s stores everywhere, it’s cheaper than the black market, and nobody’s getting raided by the cops.
Been some armed robberies tho.
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Why can't they manage their liquor laws the same way? WA has the highest liquor prices in the country and its all due to taxes and regulation.
The latest on the omicron variant. Word to the wise.
https://twitter.com/Bob_Wachter/status/1543780581074292739
Ok, opie, whatever you say.
Oh Jesus...
This is what Joe really believes.
Wait, weren't you and Diane foremost among those here advocating against vaccines? You do know that approximately 300k unecessary deaths occurred in the US due to stupid fucks not getting vaccinated and then dying, many in our hospitals, clogging up ICUS, running up health care costs, and leaving families without fathers (usually) and mothers, right? You know that right? You know that during the Delta variant, in both red and blue states, the unvaxxed led new cases, hospital admissions, and deaths from covid, right?
I'm not sure your opinion on the issue is valued by anyone who's not a stupid fuck, and there's some number fewer of them since covid began.
It’s always useful to see just _who_ likes the all the death. When Cuomo was King Of Corpse Mountain in NY, was he helping with the cause of killing “stupid fucks” by deliberately infecting old people in long-term care homes?
You can tell a monster by its love of corpses: you are a fucking monster.
NPC
Woman is angry because she runs up to everyone announcing she's "Bi" and people say, "I don't care what you do in the bedroom".
If you think this is about "acceptance" you're sorely mistaken.
If the bakery lawsuits didn't clue people in, nothing will. When you choose to force a baker you don't like to do something he doesn't like, rather than choose any of hundreds of other bakers who do like you, you have shown your true colors.
^^ This
Authoritarians gotta be authoritarians. They're is only one good response: Fuck Off Slaver!
Great, now gay people can live anywhere....
Those assholes (literally) move into a broken down neighborhood, fix up all the dilapidated residential properties and make them fabulous again, and then have the nerve to sell them for 3x what they paid (before all the work). That is STRAIGHT UP GENTRIFICATION, and we don't have to take it anymore!
Democrats love all sorts of “identity-authentic” ghettos.
"cannabis deserts"
The High Chaparral.
Sullum's missing the point. The Pot licenses are supposed to go to only the "right people". You know, the ones who support the correct politicians. Then there's the whole tax thing. These unlicensed business are depriving the State of it's cut as well as diluting the marked for the "approved" businesses.
HAHA, is Reason just welfare for j-school dropouts?
“What did "these illegal establishments" do? They sold marijuana, a business that California supposedly legalized six years ago.”
Write this outrage bait bullshit again but about alcohol sales.
Would it make sense in that context?
Did you perform ANY research?
Do you understand that cannabis is still a controlled substance?
Tell us about legalization in “free Florida.”
You make CNN look like The Economist.
So why not add cyanide to "denature" untaxed marijuana. To this day, ever since 07JUN1906, governments have added poisons that cause blindness and death to ethanol "so that it could not be used as a beverage and evade the tax on the potable article." (01JUN1925 SELZMAN V, UNITED STATES)
It's weird that these progressive California democrats are being such hypocrites and not sticking to their principles. Who could have seen that coming?
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This is what Mises CauKKus Konservatives with Greene teeth mean when they murmur "end the war on drugs." Just as Hirohito ended the war on America only by unconditional surrender, surrenderist dupes sell out to looters who simply revert back to Harrison Act taxation and making hostages of medical cartel licences. Hirohito presided over no less of a sneak attack than Volsteadism. Shooting back, then voting the bastards out worked in 1932. Yet even then the 21st Amendment was a transparent looter claw-back.
I don't see why this is news, try running an unlicensed alcohol supply, distribution, and retail operation. You'll get the same thing and alcohol is legal in 50 states.
all that government overreach should be ended as well. f off slaver.
I'm not the one enforcing the laws, or passing them in the first place.
But it's pretty fucking naive to think government is going to legalize something, so they can tax it, and then turn a blind eye to the untaxed competition.
California officialdom not only could, but likely would screw up the mailing of a postal card. That being the case, is anyone really surprised over California screwing up pot liberalization law?
Illegal cannabis distribution will remain under any circumstances, there's nothing we can do about that. Well, I don't actually see a point in that because it doesn't take much to find a legal store like weeddelivery and order cannabis there, but I guess there are some perks. However, I'm pretty sure they're not worth going to jail, so it's better to work with reliable stores, there are many of them on the internet.