L.A. Times Investigates California's Marijuana Legalization Disaster
An emphasis on corruption and enforcement downplays the very real influence of regulation and taxes on California's booming black market.

The Los Angeles Times has released a heavily researched, heavily reported investigation on the many, many ways that California's legalization of marijuana has been a disastrous mess.
Titled "Legal Weed, Broken Promises," the four stories of the series painstakingly illustrate the breadth of the illegal grow operations scattered across much of the rural parts of California, the political corruption and bribery that has come from the way the state has given politicians control over licensing, and the spread of unlicensed dispensaries that are seemingly uncontainable.
The amount of work the journalists put in to document the extent of the problem is laudable for providing valuable context for how badly California has screwed this up. Most people in California know what a disaster legalization has been. Most people know that the black market still accounts for the majority of marijuana purchases in California. Most people (especially those who live outside the big cities) are well aware of all the illegal grow operations. What this series does is provide specific examples of the dangerous environment that still exists, full of threats, violence, and even murder.
But the series is not without its flaws, the biggest of which is a relatively poor grasp of markets and the limits of the power of government to control how people interact with them, which is particularly true in a state as massive as California. There is the assumption in these stories that the breakdown in the system is due to a lack of control and enforcement by police and regulators. The stories are reluctant to address the real sources: The extent of state and local taxes drive up prices, and the ability of local officials to decide who can participate in cannabis is a huge factor in the persistence of the black market. While the stories do bring up these issues to provide some context, they really don't contend with how much of the California black market is a result of the exorbitant costs to do business legally in the state.
Instead, the illegal grow operations and unlicensed dispensaries are presented as a failure of enforcement. In a story about illegal dispensaries that dot Los Angeles County (there are probably hundreds of them in both the county and the city), reporter Matthew Ormseth visited illegal dispensaries in the county and talked to people who owned and worked there, including a wonderfully cranky owner in a "Fuck Joe Biden" hat who complained that he had initially planned to get licensed and operate legally until he found out the costs:
"Tax, permit, license," he said, ticking off the things for which a legal operator has to pay. "We're going to take your money. Without [the] license, we're going to f— you up with raids. Either way, you're going to lose."
The raids have not made him consider shutting down, he said. "Why am I going to close shop? People are crying for this stuff, crying for weed."
All of this would seem to provide evidence that the regulations and taxes are the problems. The market is not being allowed to properly provide the demand. But instead, Ormseth turns to the L.A. County Sheriff's Department to give them a place to complain that they could fix the problem by, you guessed it, throwing more people in jail:
When it comes to charging people for crimes related to illegal dispensaries, "there's this attitude: It's just cannabis, we're not going to incarcerate people for that," [Lt. Howard Fuchs of the Sheriff's Department's Narcotics Bureau] said. "Well, you're just telling the legal market, 'Good luck.'"
Illegal dispensaries, meanwhile, are making money "hand over fist," Fuchs said. His detectives have seized cash and ledgers documenting sales that indicate the busier ones are making as much as $25,000 a day in revenue, he said.
Fuchs goes on to insist that the problem can be fixed by "prosecuting people who operate or work at illegal dispensaries—and securing meaningful penalties." Did all the crackdowns on marijuana for decades and decades stop the black market? They did not. The war on drugs was lost. Why on earth are journalists giving the time of day to this tired, demonstrably untrue position?
The story about local government corruption in the marijuana industry, by Adam Ehlmahrek, Robert J. Lopez, and Ruben Vives, hits some of the same beats as my own coverage from Reason's April issue and expands it to even more cases. The story notes that part of the problem is that Proposition 64, which legalized recreational marijuana sales in California, gives local governments wide control to allow or ban cannabusinesses within their borders.
This has led, naturally, to bribes and intimidation in municipalities and counties across the state due to the twisted incentives this creates. The L.A. Times even interviewed two officials in 2021 from Calexico who had been convicted in federal court for taking bribes from an undercover FBI officer posing as a cannabusiness owner. One of them noted that setting an artificial limit of 12 licenses was a mistake that created a competition that led to corruption.
And so, it's somewhat bizarre that Times leans so heavily on the idea that the "broken promises" here is that the government hasn't extended even more control in order to rein in the black market. The real failure here is that the state and local officials have put in so many regulatory barriers and taxes that the market cannot function properly within the boundaries of the law. Illegal grow operations flood the market with cheap goods, and licensed operations can't compete because they have to give so much money to the government. The same holds true for dispensaries.
There is a government failure here, but it's not, as Fuchs believes, a lack of policing or enforcement. It's government control and greed, a need by officials to make sure they get their pockets lined before the market is allowed to provide.
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Pretty funny that (a) even the costs and disruptions of raids can't make legality attractive, (b) the raids don't actually shut him down.
Cops need to up their game, there's more raid profit still available. But I should not be surprised; they can't even shoot dogs without sometimes shooting their partners.
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…the political corruption and bribery that has come from the way the state has given politicians control over licensing
Seems like there should be an even larger lesson learned from this
Whatever happens in California, I'll always support Governor Newsom. He's sooooooo good at trolling DeSantis. 🙂
Did you know DeSantis literally made it illegal for anyone to say "gay" anywhere in the entire state of Florida? That was the first clue he deserves to be locked up by Biden's DOJ. Now that we know he's also guilty of #MarthasVineyardHumanTrafficking the case against him is even stronger. Perhaps Robert Mueller could lead the investigation.
#LibertariansForImprisoningBidensEnemies
This is true. I was drunk of mojitos down in Key West. I was wearing my Big Johnson shirt and some townie said my shirt was lame. I told him his shirt was gay. Within minutes I was whisked away and sent to a holding center at a cabana on the Florida Atlantic coast. Which is the inferior Florida coast.
#TraffickingMartha
Only in California can they decriminalize and semi-legalize marijuana and yet have the black market expand as a result. People are still buying from their illegal dealer because it's CHEAPER than the legal dispensary.
I have a friend from central California, as straight laced as they come, with family, moving to Oklahoma to set up a marijuana farm. Growing pot is not only more legal and less regulated, Oklahoma is even helping him with his moving expenses.
We have a big problem with illegal grows too. Most of them are run by the Chinese. Grow your own it's easy and much cheaper even with setup costs.
Nah, much easier and way more enjoyable for me to drive over to my buddy's house, hang out drinking a beer, maybe grill some meat up and buy a bag. Cheaper maybe but it would certainly be less quality with my gardening skills.
Washington state regulations are pretty laid back.
There are shops all along the Idaho/Washington border. Weed and edibles are very competitively priced.
Not that I've ever walked into one and purchased anything.
Democrats in California have always tried to get more tax money to buy votes. This looked like a lot of money, so they went for it.
Same thing happens in NM. There's "legal recreational weed" now but you have to let them scan your ID and put you in a database. Way easier to still just go to an outside source.
News Flash! CA government manages to screw up something that even retards should be able to handle.
And in related news, water is still wet.
Stoners manage to sell weed with fewer screwups than the State of California.
Sad.
>instead, the illegal grow operations and unlicensed dispensaries are presented as a failure of enforcement.
I don't know about dispensaries, but the growers are definitely an enforcement problem.
Except, the reason the enforcement is a failure is that the entire process is such a clusterfuck, the black market is so huge now, that separating the legal from illegal places is too hard and there are just too many illegal growers to deal with.
Byzantine rules mean that much more work for the rule enforcers, too. But they don't have the manpower and, frankly, don't want to do it. It's high risk, very low reward to find a small pot farm where you're just going to arrest a dozen undocumented.
The Cartels just moved in to the back country and started setting up everywhere. There used to be some in northern CA in the fog belt, it is pretty well documented, but now there are growers popping up all over the state and not just camping in the national forest.
Or the state could just, you know, ACTUALLY LEGALIZE IT.
Then the black market isn't pot growers, it's pot growers who don't pay taxes. Now it's up to Franchise Tax Board and the IRS, not handwringing regulators worried that the proper baksheesh is being paid to the correct officials.
Even with legal alcohol sales, I still pass out homebrew to my buddies when they come over. Because homebrew (up to 200 gallons a year) is still legal. And revenoors aren't coming around hassling me about where I get my hops. In contrast, homegrown pot is "legal" in California but the state still hassles people who grow their own because you're only supposed to grow enough for your personal use. And you can't grow it all at once for the whole year, that makes you an illegal retailer. If you have more in your possession then you can personaly smoke in a month then you are a criminal and the prison guard union that runs the state will be happy to teach you the error of your ways.
The state is fucked and calling pot legal is a fucking joke.
Every state with legal grows has cartel grows nearby, much of which is harvested and then trafficked back down south or to non-legal states. And every state with legal sales has a thriving black market. The whole outcome was 100% predictable.
Yet, somehow, illegal alcohol and tobacco isn't overwhelming the legal market. Taxes and regulation always cause black market activity, but with pot its off the charts. As long as the government profits more than all the parts of the supply chain combined, other sources will be utilized.
The Los Angeles Times has released a heavily researched, heavily reported investigation
Heavily redacted, too?
"Why on earth are journalists giving the time of day to this tired, demonstrably untrue position?"
Why are you surprised by this? Journalists give air to this position because the statist/pro-government option is the mainstream consensus option, especially in California. Sorry Reason but socially "progressive or liberal" is not the same as socially "libertarian." Expecting California liberals to embrace libertarian/voluntarist solutions is silly. You'd be better off trying to influence and pursue pro-free market legalization in states with electorates that are more supportive of open markets.
Reason is absolutely right. The LA TImes article went on and on and on and never did make the point that taxes are the problem!
Did California handle booze legalization as badly for its first decade or more?
If I run a black market operation, I have a legs up on ANY legal competitor who has to deal with cost of labor, overhead, materials, taxes, etc. If we assume Florida and Texas as low tax and regulation states, black markets would still thrive there, because I would be able to undercharge them. Customers don't have to worry about me asking for ID, calling the cops on me for suspected criminal activity, etc.
Legalization failed to deter black markets in CA because the state has no control over its turf, including the border. If you think a bunch of people who lets homeless people take over their territories can stop the drug cartel from planting their own stuff in remote parts of town, there are bridges to be sold.
Legalization may have even presented more opportunity for the cartel, since legal infrastructure now exists and the product is now more mainstream. The customer base would only expand in the future.
The California Democratic Party Investigates Itself
Fixed your headline for you. Am I now an associate editor, too?