Pubdate: Wed, 22 Aug 2012 Source: Denver Post (CO) Copyright: 2012 The Denver Post Corp Contact: http://www.denverpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122 Author: Vincent Carroll WARPED IMAGES OF OUR CANNABIS INDUSTRY Is the medical marijuana industry really shoveling the drug into the black market with utter disdain for the law, as both the attorney general and a recent report by the Rocky Mountain High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (HIDTA) suggest? Or, as Governing magazine recently reported, has Colorado "produced a tightly controlled approach" to medical marijuana regulation "that more states are starting to emulate"? Both images can't be accurate - and there is reason to believe neither is. In announcing the indictment this month of the owner of the Silver Lizard dispensary for alleged involvement in a multistate marijuana-distribution ring, Colorado Attorney General John Suthers declared, "It is becoming clear that, as predicted in 2010 legislative hearings, Colorado is becoming a significant exporter of marijuana to the rest of the country." And he cited the HIDTA report as further evidence for his thesis. It's worth noting, however, that the Silver Lizard was never licensed by the state. Meanwhile, regional drug officials responsible for the report are so hostile to the very concept of medical marijuana that they resort repeatedly to the derisive use of quotes. By the 20th encounter with "medical" marijuana, the reader wants to shout, "I get it. I get it. You think the product is a fraud." (Actually, research increasingly is providing evidence that cannabis does have useful medicinal properties, but that's a subject for another day.) To be sure, the report cites a number of incidents in which police in various states arrested someone possessing marijuana and found evidence of a link to a Colorado dispensary (such as packaging). But the report also includes incidents in which the only link appears to be the word of those stopped - who in a typical instance, for example, tell the patrol officer "they had purchased the products from a 'store' in Colorado." Do people arrested for drug possession invariably volunteer the truth about their sources? Unfortunately, Governing magazine also stretches plausibility in portraying a virtually airtight system. "As required under the complex regulatory scheme that state policymakers have crafted," Governing says, camera feeds covering every inch of the RiverRock marijuana grow facility "are transmitted to video screens at the offices of the Colorado Medical Marijuana Enforcement Division a few miles away. No part of RiverRock's cultivation and distribution escapes the eyes of state regulators. Each of the hundreds of plants growing in the dispensary is tagged with a radio frequency identification chip." Actually, state regulators tell me, the overall marijuana plant inventory system hasn't been completed. Moreover, while a system of centrally monitored on-site cameras is both the ideal and the goal, it's an expensive proposition for which the state has yet to locate funds. And in the meantime? "There are bad dispensaries and bad growers who divert marijuana into the black market," says George Baker Thomson Jr., the state's senior director of enforcement. "I don't think anyone in this department would disagree with that. ... But medical marijuana is not the only industry I regulate where we see diversion. We see diversion to minors in the tobacco world all the time. We see diversion to minors in the liquor world. This is not a problem specific to medical marijuana." Although he didn't mention it, we see diversion in the pharmaceutical world, too. Just as no one can stop a marijuana patient from buying 2 ounces at a dispensary and sharing it with friends, no one can prevent someone on oxycontin from sharing pills, either. And don't forget, the marijuana industry remains in flux. Thomson and division director Laura K. Harris told me the state received 2,700 applications for dispensaries, grow facilities and "infused product manufacturers" by the August 2010 deadline. Eventually, Thomson predicts, about 1,200 to 1,400 will be left - 500 to 600 dispensaries and 700 to 800 associated grow centers. A facility about to fail or have its application rejected is far more likely to deal in the black market than those on the road to success, he points out. Still, if the state is going to maintain credibility as a regulator, it's got to speed up the application process. Shockingly, so far it has licensed only 288 facilities. Thomson says the state is ready to act on many others but is waiting for approvals from local government. And it's a vicious circle: Because the division relies on annual fees paid by licensed facilities, its operating budget is on emergency rations, supporting just 15 full-time employees - nowhere near enough to inspect sales and grow facilities with the frequency lawmakers seemingly expected. "What the legislature thought we were doing is setting up a regulatory framework to track medical marijuana from the seed to the point of sale," state Sen. Pat Steadman, D-Denver, told me. That system is clearly still a work in progress. We can throw up our hands along with those who always opposed it, or we can give it another year or two to fulfill its promise. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt