Pubdate: Sun, 21 Dec 2014 Source: Tulsa World (OK) Copyright: 2014 World Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.tulsaworld.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/463 Author: Randy Krehbiel Page: A1 OFFICIALS: COLORADO POT HITS IN STATE Large Amounts of the Stronger Marijuana Are Arriving, Officials Say. Legal retail sales of marijuana in Colorado have had a definite if indirect impact on Oklahoma law enforcement agencies, a spokesman for the Oklahoma Board of Narcotics and Dangerous Drug Control said. "We are seeing collateral effects," said Mark Woodward. "It is a big deal because the marijuana coming out of Colorado is so much more powerful than what we've seen in the past." Woodward said the OBNDDC supports Attorney General Scott Pruitt's decision to join Nebraska's Jon Bruning in a suit to stop the commercial production and sale of marijuana in Colorado. On Friday, Pruitt clarified his position, saying his suit primarily targets Colorado's commercial marijuana industry. "If Colorado had merely legalized marijuana for personal use and possession then there would be no lawsuit from Oklahoma and Nebraska," Pruitt said in a written statement. "But Colorado did more than that. Colorado established a regulatory scheme to promote the commercial sale of marijuana which has led to illegal products from Colorado being trafficked across state lines into Oklahoma, Nebraska and surrounding states. Our litigation is focused on that portion of the Colorado law which authorized the commercial sale of marijuana." The real problem seems to be less legal sales of Colorado marijuana and more what appear to be illegal sales of potent new strains of cannabis grown in both licensed and unlicensed facilities and in the state's vast wilderness areas. Virtually all of Colorado's legally marketed marijuana is grown inside, either in large warehouses equipped with high-energy grow lights or, increasingly, in greenhouses. Much of the production is in metropolitan Denver's industrial districts. Recreational sales are supposed to be limited to an ounce per Colorado resident and a quarter-ounce per nonresident. While there have been many reports of customers doubling and tripling up by going to different stores, "that doesn't explain the duffel bags with anywhere from 15 pounds to 400 pounds that we've been confiscating," said Woodward. "That is being sold by somebody," he said. "Who, we're not sure." Tulsa County Undersheriff Tim Albin said his department has "seen an increase in drugs smuggled" but "I don't want to call it major." Most recently, he said, the department's drug task force seized a load of THC-infused "edibles" similar to the popular Gummy Bears candy. THC, or tetrahydrocannabinol, is what gives marijuana its buzz. THC levels in marijuana have steadily increased over the past six decades, from around 1 percent in the 1960s to as high as 37 percent today. As Woodward noted, some of the most potent marijuana is being grown in Colorado - so much so that pot is now being smuggled from the U.S. into Mexico. And, according to the Washington Post and others, the fields in northwest Mexico that once produced the marijuana sold on street corners in American cities have been converted to poppies for the production of heroin and other opiates. Woodward said his agency has had "about a dozen" cases involving Colorado marijuana over the past two years. "That may not sound like a lot, but it's all we know of," he said, noting that local law enforcement agencies and the Department of Public Safety are also impacted. Colorado itself is concerned about black market sales. In November, state and federal authorities raided four Denver warehouses believed to have been selling marijuana "out the back door." In October, new production rules went into effect that some fear will create a glut of marijuana, drive down local prices and increase illicit sales. Woodward said marijuana bought for $1,000 in Colorado can be sold for three times that amount in Oklahoma and more than five times more on the East Coast. There are also concerns that international drug gangs are operating in the state behind legitimate marijuana-related businesses. "The ones who have benefited in Colorado are the cartels," said Albin. "They sell it out of cars and undercut the (licensed) dispensaries because they don't have the overhead costs." According to news reports, there is considerable disagreement about the nature of black market sales in Colorado, but Attorney General John Suthers admits the state is struggling to stay on top of the burgeoning industry. "I think it's pretty safe to say that we are becoming a major exporter of marijuana," Suthers told National Public Radio earlier this month. "You go to some of these warehouse districts and there's maybe four or five grow operations, and I think some people are counting on the fact that nobody's going to notice that this particular one isn't licensed, no one's going to particularly notice that a lot of marijuana's going out the back door." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom