Police Also Recover Suspected Cocaine From Suspects' Vehicles Police recovered 9.1 pounds of processed marijuana and a little more than $20,000 cash from the room of [name1 redacted], the Fort Lewis College student who was shot and killed early Tuesday during a home invasion. The marijuana was in plastic bags and glass jars, and all the packaging was marked with product information, according to a news release issued Thursday by the Durango Police Department. "It is obvious from the packaging and through interviews that this is black market marijuana, and it was being illegally distributed," the release says. [continues 311 words]
Dear Stoner: My brother has cancer, and I think medical marijuana would be better for his pain than Oxycontin, which can be addictive. If you were looking for advice on what strains to use, where would you go? Marge Dear Marge: Opiate painkillers work for many people, but I've also seen the addictive effects firsthand: Several kids I went to high school with are now doing heroin because of their opiate addictions. For cancer patients suffering extreme pain and nausea from their conditions and/or chemotherapy, potent and heavy strains are the way to go. Heavy indicas like Afghani, Alien Rock Candy, Bubba Kush or Grape Ape are all great candidates for insomnia and pain relief. Most strains with the word "Purple" in their names and any indica-leaning kush are also usually a safe bet. Sativa strains like Jack Herer, Tangerine Kush and anything Hawaiian are good for stimulating appetites, but they affect everyone differently. [continues 287 words]
Plant-count work-arounds Last week, CannaBiz reported on the plight of Rebecca Lockwood - a local mom who grows marijuana at home to treat her severely autistic son, Calvin, and several other sick kids. Since City Council put a 12-plant limit on residential grows, caregivers like her will have to choose: stop making life-saving medicine or risk arrest. This week, CannaBiz breaks down that choice, because nothing's really ever that simple, is it? One option for homegrowers is to buy from a dispensary. That is indeed viable if any of the 132 medical marijuana centers in town grow the appropriate strains at an affordable price point. But that's a big "if." Many patients grow at home precisely because those factors are prohibitive. [continues 356 words]
I have nothing against the legal use of marijuana. However, after driving by Civic Center on Sunday morning and seeing it trashed by participants of Saturday's pot celebration, I think all future gatherings of this type should be forever banned from city facilities. There were thousands of bottles and other debris strewn over several blocks of Broadway. There were clearly inadequate trash containers, and the participants were slobs. I hope the city has the ability to levy heavy fines against the promoter. Abby Humphrey, Denver [end]
Street marijuana dealers face the same risks and penalties if they were selling crack cocaine or other schedule 1 substances. Because they take the same risk, it is likely that the street dealer will also carry drugs other than marijuana. The illegal street pusher takes no more risk offering more dangerous and addictive substances and therefore offers the gateway to purchase them. Recreational cannabis is clean, controlled, monitored by law enforcement, regulated and tested. No other product is dispensed and no gateways are offered within these law-abiding establishments. Let's keep our recreational systems in place and keep our Pueblo residents out of jeopardy. Let's keep educating and put our efforts into preventing illegal street marijuana gateway sales from occurring. Peter Mutty Pueblo West [end]
The Littleton City Council's crushing 5-1 vote this week against allowing recreational marijuana sales is the latest evidence that Coloradans remain deeply divided over this state's ongoing experiment with legal pot. Even after more than two years of extensive retail sales next door in Denver, Littleton leaders believe such commerce could do more harm to their community than it is worth. Which is their prerogative, of course. Amendment 64 provides for a local option and that's what the city just exercised. [continues 378 words]
Dear Stoner: I'm thinking about quitting smoking flower. I'll probably eat edibles, but I want my lungs to stay healthy. Will they heal themselves if I quit? J.R. Huff 'n' Stuff Dear J.R.: Good for you, man. As much as I love consuming cannabis and all that it does, there's no way around the effects of smoke on lungs after years of use, so I commend you for even considering the idea. According to the American Lung Association, the dangers of marijuana smoke include chronic cough, phlegm production, wheezing and acute bronchitis. The first three are likely to gradually disappear in the weeks, months and years after you quit smoking, but if you get chronic bronchitis or emphysema, then you're stuck for life. If your lungs and the air sacs in them aren't completely forsaken, though, they could slowly regenerate and eventually filter out all of the tar - so don't be surprised if you continue to cough for a little after quitting. [continues 264 words]
Recently in The Pueblo Chieftain I read a group of medical professionals united to sign a document in favor of the current (misguided) petition in favor of outlawing marijuana establishments, etc.; within Pueblo County. Currently, another voter issue would allow wine, full-strength beers and even spirits in grocery stores. I see none of the righteous indignation of these groups over the alcohol issue. The hypocrisy is astonishing, ROTFLOL (Rolling on the floor laughing out loud). Alcohol is much worse than marijuana. But marijuana is so much more emotional than alcohol. [continues 189 words]
I am writing in response to a recent article published on May 3 titled, "At the State Capitol: Marijuana bill headed to the governor." I understand this is a sensitive subject with many pros and cons; however, I feel that HB 1373 is a solid start to allowing children with various diseases or disorders to get there medical marijuana (nonsmokeable) medicine administered in school by a parent or guardian. I realize this bill may come under some scrutiny from other student's parents and or teachers due to the risk of having marijuana on the premises, thus giving the impression that drugs are allowed at school. I feel that school staff and parents may communicate regularly that these adults will control this policy with sternness and follow the rules set forth by the government. [continues 60 words]
Heroin use is such a huge issue in our country; it seems to be the drug of choice for most people in today's world. In Pueblo alone, we had seven deaths as a result of overdoses on heroin in 2014; in 2015, we had nine deaths on top of the 13 homicides in our city. When will we see that we cannot treat addicts like hardened criminals? Addiction should be treated like a disease. Our main focus should be the rehabilitation of people who have been led astray. When someone is rehabilitated, they can take back their life, everything the drug has taken away. We have all seen how addiction tears families apart. Everyone hurts when someone they love abuses drugs. [continues 129 words]
Steamboat Springs - Armed with a stack of photos, research, statistics and zoning maps, the operators of a local marijuana business on Tuesday will try to convince at least one more Steamboat Springs City Council member to let them move into a more visible spot between a restaurant and a liquor store. The hearing on Natural Choice's proposal to move to Curve Plaza in west Steamboat is a do-over for council. Whatever the council decides is poised to be controversial. [continues 549 words]
The fines levied against marijuana businesses through the county's enforcement division are helping homeless people who have become stranded in Pueblo. In an effort to help homeless get back to their places of origin, the Pueblo County commissioners voted Wednesday to give the Pueblo Area Law Enforcement Chaplains Corp. a $25,000 grant that would be used to help benefit homeless individuals without support in Pueblo County. Commissioner Sal Pace said the money for the grant comes from funding that the county has set aside from marijuana fine money to address homelessness and youth drug prevention. [continues 480 words]
Home groan Clint and Rebecca Lockwood rushed to City Hall when they heard Colorado Springs City Council was about to limit home grows to 12 plants, but Council had already adopted the ordinance. So they went home worried sick about their son, Calvin, who's severely autistic and relies on homemade CBD oil to keep his aggression under control. Without it, their home is hell. The Lockwoods say that, unmedicated, Calvin won't sleep, sweats, shakes, eats furniture, attacks his younger brother and bashes his head into the wall until he bleeds. [continues 800 words]
Colorado pot smokers are helping send 25 students to college, the first scholarships in the U.S. funded with taxes on legal marijuana. The awards offered by Pueblo County, in southern Colorado, are the latest windfall from legal Colorado marijuana sales that are also helping build schools and aid the homeless - and in one county, providing 8% raises to municipal workers. Pueblo County is granting $1,000 each to the students; recipients will be announced later this month. "It's incredible," said Beverly Duran, the executive director of the Pueblo Hispanic Education Foundation, which is overseeing the scholarships. "Every year we get a nice pool of students ... but we can always only award to a small percentage. This for us expands that to extraordinary lengths." [continues 221 words]
John Hickenlooper, Once a Leading Critic, Now Says the Industry Looks 'Like It Might Work.' Here's Why. DENVER - When Colorado voted to legalize recreational marijuana four years ago, one of the move's chief critics was Gov. John Hickenlooper. The moderate Democrat said that if he could "wave a magic wand" to reverse the decision, he would. Then he called voters "reckless" for approving it in the first place, a remark he later downgraded to "risky." "Colorado is known for many great things," Hickenlooper said. "Marijuana should not be one of them." [continues 636 words]
State's High- Grade Marijuana Is in Big Demand on Black Market DENVER - If you can dream up a way to smuggle marijuana out of Colorado, chances are someone else has already tried it: Cars and trucks. Potato chip bags and jars of peanut butter. The U. S. mail. Not even the sky is the limit: A pilot last year confessed he used his skydiving planes to deliver nearly a ton of pot to buyers in Texas and Minnesota, court records show. [continues 787 words]
Colorado's top prosecutors and police officials want a two-year moratorium on new marijuana laws to give officers time to catch up. In a letter dated last week and sent to lawmakers, leaders of the state's three main groups of law enforcement officials said local police "cannot keep up with the quantity and speed of constantly changing marijuana law." There have been 81 marijuana-related bills introduced in the Colorado legislature in just the past four years, according to the letter. [continues 145 words]
A school district board in El Paso County approved Thursday a policy to allow therapeutic marijuana products at its schools. The District 49 Board of Education, in Peyton, unanimously, in a five-to-zero vote, approved the "Compassionate Administration of Therapeutic Cannabinoid Products on District Property" policy, the district announced in a media release. The policy, known as "Jaxs' policy," was approved as part of a regularly scheduled monthly meeting and is the first of its kind in the state, according to the district. [continues 286 words]
The three sons of a woman shot to death in 2014 have filed what appears to be the country's first wrongful-death lawsuit against the recreational marijuana industry. The lawsuit claims that the company that made the marijuana edible and the store that sold the candy to Richard Kirk recklessly and purposefully failed to warn him about the bite-sized candy's potency and possible side effects - including hallucinations and other psychotic behaviors. Hours after Kirk purchased the marijuana candy April 14, 2014, Kristine Kirk, 44, called 911 terrified of her husband, who was ranting about the end of the world and jumping in and out of windows. All three of the couple's young sons heard the gunshot that killed their mother. Their youngest son, who was 7 at the time, watched his mother die, according to an amended complaint filed Monday night. [continues 1068 words]
In the first three months of 2016, Colorado pot shops sold more than $270 million of cannabis and related products, according to new figures from the state Department of Revenue. The state's latest data show that its marijuana shops sold nearly $90 million of cannabis in March. The licensed stores sold more than $55 million of recreational marijuana and more than $33 million of medical cannabis in March, the latest month for which the department has released tax data for the industry. Totals for retail and medical marijuana dipped slightly in March after a bustling February, which was the state's fifth-most-lucrative month for sales since they began in January 2014, according to the Cannabist's calculations and state data. [continues 222 words]