Pubdate: Fri, 16 Jan 2015 Source: Daily Courier, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2015 The Okanagan Valley Group of Newspapers Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/5NyOACet Website: http://www.kelownadailycourier.ca Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/531 Author: Don Plant MARIJUANA DISPENSARY TARGETED BY MOUNTIES RCMP lowered the boom on a new marijuana dispensary that was sailing under the radar in downtown Kelowna. Mounties raided the Kaya Clinic on Lawrence Avenue this week after receiving complaints the shop may be trafficking weed. They seized more than 12 pounds of dried marijuana and dozens of derivatives, including oils, hash, capsules, teas, honey, cookies and more. "We received reports of the operations of this dispensary. We had reasonable grounds an offence was being committed. If that occurs, we'll take enforcement action," RCMP spokesman Const. Kris Clark said Friday. The shop is now closed. Officers are consulting with federal prosecutors about whether owners of the business should be charged with possession for the purpose of trafficking. Two other marijuana dispensaries operate in the Central Okanagan, but it doesn't appear police are planning to close them down. The Bkind location in Rutland is a compassion club and operates under a different model. "We'll likely have a conversation with them, but we're not at the same stage as the one downtown," Clark said. The West Kelowna dispensary, Black Crow Herbal Solutions, is fairly new and Clark knows little about it. Pot dispensaries have been operating for years in a kind of legal limbo in B.C. There's no mechanism in Canada that allows for a dispensary or compassion club to function, and yet police have for the most part let them be. Last week, officers in Grand Forks warned the owner of a dispensary that he may be breaking the law, prompting him to close it - at least temporarily. Current legislation allows people with prescriptions to access medical marijuana for a medical purpose, but it doesn't provide "blanket legality" to produce, use or traffic the substance, RCMP say. Global TV reported last week that officials with the City of Kelowna were concerned the owners of the Kaya Clinic may have misled them when they applied for a licence to operate last year. "As we understand it, they have a business licence for retail operations, and through our investigation it looks like it has transformed into a medical marijuana dispensary," Rob Mayne told the TV station. No arrests have been made. The business remains closed until further notice, a sign on the door read Friday. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom