Marijuana Legalization in California Has Gone Miserably, So Officials Are Expanding Drug Enforcement
The Golden State promises a progressive, environmentally conscious, labor-friendly war on weed.

California Attorney General Rob Bonta has announced nearly a million marijuana plants were eradicated in a multi-agency 13-week enforcement effort to stop illegal grow operations across the state. Furthermore, this annual three-month program, first launched in 1983, is going to be transformed into an ongoing task force.
California's marijuana legalization has gone so poorly that the state is actually expanding the drug war.
The enforcement program Bonta refers to is the state's Campaign Against Marijuana Planting (CAMP). It was founded as part of the war on drugs to try to tackle the many illegal marijuana grow operations across a massive state with huge swathes of undeveloped land.
The data itself is a fascinating look at how little drug legalization means when a state's regulatory systems are so oppressive that it undermines the legal market. In 1984, CAMP's first full year of operation, the program was responsible for the eradication of 158,000 marijuana plants. In 2022, after almost 40 years of a drug war and eight years of legalization in the state, that number has grown to 974,000 plants, spread across 449 operations in 26 counties, according to the October 11 announcement from Bonta's office.
Despite the bragging tone of Bonta's release, full of quotes from various agency heads about how awesome it is to work together to "bring a whole government approach to combating the damage caused by illegal marijuana cultivation on public lands," the state is by no means winning this struggle. The numbers show that California has both failed to make a dent in illegal marijuana growth during the drug war that launched CAMP, and it has also failed to make a dent in illegal marijuana growth after the drug was made legal.
As Bonta announced CAMP's annual numbers, he also announced that this 39-year-old drug war relic will "transition" into something EPIC. I'm not kidding. It's called the Eradication and Prevention of Illicit Cannabis (EPIC) task force.
Under legalization, California is actually expanding the scope of this enforcement system far beyond what it was under prohibition.
Bonta has been attempting to rebrand the drug war to make it seem modern and very, very progressive. There are no references to "cartels" in his release, no mentions of any arrests at all (unlike this report from 1988 that emphasizes the number of arrests along with the seizures of guns and vehicles), and, fortunately, no fearmongering about the effects of marijuana use or protecting children from the scourge of drug predators.
Instead, the transition to EPIC seems to be an attempt to characterize the drug war as a progressive law enforcement measure to protect California's undeveloped wildlands and enforce the state's employment regulations. "With the transition to EPIC, we're taking the next step and building out our efforts to address the environmental and economic harms and labor exploitation associated with this underground market," Bonta writes.
This is how Bonta has talked about marijuana enforcement since taking office last year. While there's no sensationalism or exaggerated lists of effects of drug use, there's a list of all the toxic chemicals associated with these illegal grow operations and mention of fears of the state's water supply being diverted. There's anger at how the black market grow operations undermine the state's extremely union-friendly laws with cheaper labor.
To be clear, many of these illegal grow operations are indeed dangerous and have resulted in predatory and violent behavior. The way that California has legalized marijuana—with exorbitantly high taxes and corruption-fueling local control mechanisms—has fueled the same dangerous black market the state saw under prohibition.
That also means that these new enforcement measures probably aren't going to accomplish Bonta's goal of eliminating illegal grow operations any more than the last four decades of drug war enforcement did. It's not a new solution to the problem—it's just rebranding the drug war as a progressive operation.
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Instead, the transition to EPIC seems to be an attempt to characterize the drug war as a progressive law enforcement measure to protect California's undeveloped wildlands and enforce the state's employment regulations. "With the transition to EPIC, we're taking the next step and building out our efforts to address the environmental and economic harms and labor exploitation associated with this underground market," Bonta writes.
It would be 100% reasonable and within good journalistic standards to describe their intentions as "good".
"'It would be 100% reasonable and within good journalistic standards to describe their intentions as “good”."'
It's very good for padding the pensions of members of law enforcement.
The Road to Hell is paved with something. Gold bricks? The wishes of toddlers? I can't remember, someone remind me.
The bodies of dead Guests?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ksym3q4meek
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Mike's not here man.
Who is this Mike person anyway?
Jews?
We need moar lawz and punishments!
TIJUANA BORDER GUARD: "This one's OK. Let him in. THE REST OF YOU, VETE!"
Instead, the transition to EPIC seems to be an attempt to
confuse kids into thinking they are the makers of Fortnite and scam them out of billions for character skins like the makers of Fortnite do.
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What does this have to do with gay men not taking responsibility for themselves and the risks they take? How is government almighty supposed to help the oppressed gay men enjoy their orgies consequence free if the news isn't tied to their risk of monkeypox or whatever else is being pushed as the weekly apocalypse.
Gotta love progressive governance.
jeebus how do you fuck up everything at the same time?
Hold your horses, we haven’t even got warmed up yet:
https://www.cannabisbusinesstimes.com/article/sacramento-cannabis-tax-ballot-measure-vote-unincorporated-homeless/
The special tax proposal going before voters in November would include rates that do not exceed 6% for retail, 4% for manufacturing, 3% for distribution, 2% for testing, and 3% for cultivation or $10 per canopy square foot, according to the board of supervisors’ approved resolution.
can't even.
Stealing more money to pay for out f control homeless rampaging and shutting on the streets. Although we all know that money will go straight to the general fund.
Only California could legalize marijuana and have the unintended consequences of an increased black market.
Next time just legalize the damned weed. As in legalize. Look it up if you don't know what that means. Jeepers.
Hey Reason those illegal farms are grading illegally and changing water flows illegally often stealing water, yes water theft is a thing, and using illegal chemical fertilizers that are killing animals and fish. they are also purposely poisoning animals, deer ,bear etc to protect their harvest. Those illegal farms are doing massive damage. I know I've seen many as a resident in Northern California. bust all the illegal farms and that includes my neighbor who is a nice guy but to bad
Yep, a problem caused by gov't regulations, so we need more gov't to fix it, right?
so you are okay with stealing water and harming animals and land beyond their own property that is what they are doing if it was limited to their own property i wouldn't care but it not and that is what the government is for to protect other people from the actions of others
I think you missed the point of his question.
In Humboldt county the regulatory hoops to jump through and, more importantly, the money spent to get a permit makes it extremely hard to operate legally and make a profit. The alternative is to hide in the wooded mountains and grow illegally.
If California were to actually make growing pot legal they would tax it at the same rate as tomatoes and the crop would move out of the mountains and into the Central Valley along with most agriculture.
It is about squeezing as much money in taxes as possible while micromanaging everything.
I don't know about Humbolt but the county I'm in it is fairly easy to comply. I know since I have done a few for law abiding clients.
So... more coercion and deadly force will undo the harm done by the previous 16 rounds of adding successive layers of coercion and aggression plus reprisals of deadly force? How did you find this out?
So even in weed the government can't compete with the free market? Who wudda known?
Like that picture: "HAVE YOU SEEN THIS CAT?" with the tear-offs that--instead of a phone number--say "I HAVE NOW!"
Local and state government in California could top Scientology when it comes to incompetence, evil, and arrogance.
-jcr
Under legalization, California is actually expanding the scope of this enforcement system far beyond what it was under prohibition.
Of course, now those operations are competitors.
This is it exactly.
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This surprises you? The state is defending the tax revenue expect to receive from the state sponsored cartel it created by stamping out the competition.
EPIC…Wasn’t that Upton Sinclair’s socialist platform that he ran for governor in California on back in the 1930s?
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California did not legalize MJ for freedom reasons, they did it because they saw dollar signs. Then they taxed it so much it encouraged the unregulated business. Worse than criminal sales of MJ is competing with the greed of the states money machine. This news proves it.
SHHH... maybe they'll try taxing acid.
You tiptoed up to it without saying it, so I will say it...
This stepped up enforcement is merely the result of the government going from being the incompetent prohibitionist to being a player in the game. They are protecting their territory in the drug trade by eliminating the competition to their cronies.
Hand the man a cigar!
This sounds more like it's about taxes than anything else.
The states that legalize MJ make the process so onerous and expensive that black market MJ is enormously profitable, so follow the money, it's basic economics. The enforcement actions then go up against the black market growers where they can seize money and property, which gets forfeited. The black market growers aren't always environmentally friendly, they sometimes use coerced labor (especially non-American growers like Chinese and Mexicans), and they're more likely to have weapons and be violent. Great system states like CA have made...
The goal is to maximize the number of people employed by the state.
Thank you for sharing! Old Classic California!
ANOTHER proof that the Laffer Curve demonstrates the facts of reality are really real?! So what? Commie altruists will continue to worship ban-energy Warmunism just as looter christianofascisti still insist that weed is evil, wicked, mean and nasty and an avatar of Satan, while forcing women to reproduce "isn't really" slavery. Good faith makes 2+2=5 as long as you really believe it!