The marijuana grow that netted jail time for four members of a self-proclaimed medicinal farming family out of Stevens County may have started with good intentions, but ended as a "distribution center," said the federal judge who handed down their sentences Friday. "Maybe that was a byproduct of being so successful," said U.S. District Court Judge Thomas O. Rice, ruling the members of the so-called Kettle Falls Five grew more than 150 pounds of marijuana in the hills of Stevens County between 2011 and 2012. [continues 801 words]
PORTLAND - At 10 a.m. Thursday, the doors of the Pure Green dispensary opened for the first time to recreational sales, with staff ushering in customers waiting outside who could choose from two dozens strains of pot, and receive a free joint along with their first purchase. Pure Green is one of 119 medical dispensaries scattered across Portland that as of Oct. 1 can sell marijuana to anyone over the age of 21. These dispensaries turn the city into a recreational pot mecca, where such outlets outnumber those that sell hard liquor, according to state regulatory agencies. [continues 718 words]
Several Seattle lawyers have joined in a lawsuit challenging the city's clampdown on medical-marijuana dispensaries. The lawsuit filed Wednesday in King County Superior Court contends the city's regulations aimed at shutting down dispensaries exceed its authority. Because marijuana remains federally illegal, the lawsuit claims the city lacks the power to regulate and tax the drug and shutter businesses who sell it. The defendant in the case is Columbia City Holistic Health, a dispensary. Because of the federal ban on pot, turning over dispensary business records demanded by the city would amount to self-incrimination, the suit says. [continues 91 words]
How Weed Enhances Your Imagination. or Mine, at Least. I'm clearly not as bright as Steve Jobs or Carl Sagan or Oprah, all of whom used weed at some point to energize their already wildly firing synapses. (As did President Obama, Stephen Jay Gould, Margaret Mead, Bill Gates, George Washington, Maya Angelou, Martha Stewart, et al.) But marijuana has helped spur my own creative process, or, if nothing else, helped me make connections I might otherwise have missed. I'll give ya some examples. [continues 749 words]
SPD Officers Have Issued Six Since 2013 Riverfront Park might be the worst place to get high in Spokane. Data from Spokane Municipal Court shows marijuana users are far more likely to be fined for consuming pot in public by a park security guard than by a Spokane police officer, though they're unlikely to get a ticket at all. Citywide, law enforcement officers have written 28 tickets for public consumption of marijuana since March 2013, when an ordinance prohibiting public consumption was added to the city code. Only six of those tickets were written by Spokane police officers, who say they're usually too busy with other calls for service to deal with pot smokers. [continues 591 words]
Fears of fire and Frankenbud. We asked you to send in your canna-questions, and now it's time to answer some reader mail! (The Higher Ground legal staff has asked me to remind readers that answers provided herein should be taken with a grain of hempseed; I am, after all, a marijuana columnist.) With wildfires all over the state, I'm worried a nearby marijuana field may catch on fire and get me and my family stoned. Can burning weed farms get people high? Lance, Chelan [continues 857 words]
Business at SEATTLE, WASH.- Uncle Ike's Pot Shop is buzzing as nine "budtenders" help customers pick out weed, candies, bongs and more while another dozen people stand in line and flip through "menus." "I can help the next guest down here," an employee shouts out. Open for just under a year, Uncle Ike's already has 30 employees, a taco food truck in the parking lot, a glass and goods satellite shop and $1.5 million in monthly sales, according to Kenji Hobbs, the night manager. [continues 2136 words]
A roundup of pot news. With legalization comes normalization, innovation, and marijuana bars at weddings. Ya heard that right. This summer, an Oregon couple had a "weed tent" at their nuptials, including a budtender to help answer questions (and moderate intake). The event, in West Linn, just south of Portland, was fully legal (Oregon Measure 91 passed with flying colors), as it was on a tree farm (private property) and did not also include a liquor license. (Heaven forbid we let budtenders and bartenders share a tent.) The CannaBar featured 13 hand-picked varietals and was fully enclosed so as not to offend guests not in the mood to partake. In case you're wondering, munchies served included french fries and chocolate beignets. [continues 792 words]
Washington legislators are doing everything they can to keep marijuana users from smoking together. It's time that stopped. It's time for us to come together and smoke marijuana. Over and over, legislators at all levels in Washington state have prevented us from doing just that by hampering public marijuana use-in fact, a recent law makes providing a place for public use a Class C felony. Lawmakers are making it impossible to promote and celebrate cannabis. Thus it's time for some civil disobedience. [continues 930 words]
Medical marijuana patients were generally ignored when the Cannabis Patient Protection Act was up for debate this year. Instead legislators pushing this bill were more concerned with those who would benefit from restrictions on cannabis such as the pharmaceutical industry. The shortsightedness shown by those pushing this legislation may end up costing patients and others, including the state, in the long run. In 1974, medical researchers in Virginia discovered that the compound THC in marijuana killed cancerous tumors in lab animals. That research was reportedly withheld from the American public on orders of the DEA. However change is happening. Recently the National Cancer Institute reported, "Cannabis has been shown to kill cancer cells in the laboratory." Just imagine the benefits to patients and society if that research from 1974 had not been withheld from the public. [continues 108 words]
Will you be Queen Sativa-or a few grams short? Marijuana has been legal in Washington for more than two years now, but, surprisingly, people know very little about the law. Take the Higher Ground CannaQuiz and see how you rate! 1. Each adult can grow up to four plants in their backyard. 2. I can walk around with an ounce of weed in my pocket and not get busted. 3. Because marijuana is legal in both Washington and Oregon, I can take Washington weed to a Portland pot party. [continues 731 words]
A pot ad ran on TV-almost. The first-ever recreational-marijuana ad for television was supposed to air last month during Jimmy Kimmel Live on a Denver-based ABC affiliate. At the last minute, KMGH (Channel 7) got cold feet, pulling the plug after the station's lawyers freaked out. The ad, for Neos, a vaporizer and cannabis-oil company, was hardly Cheech and Chong-in fact, it didn't show marijuana at all. Instead, the spot featured young people hiking up mountain trails and enjoying themselves-weed-free. "You lead an adventurous life, always finding new ways to relax," boomed the REI-looking advert. "Now enjoy the best effects and control with Neos portable vape pen and recreate discreetly this summer." Blasphemous! [continues 790 words]
Here's A Look at Marijuana's Role in Traffic Fatalities, Quality-Of-Life Issues, Crime When recreational marijuana was legalized, Washington entered the unknown, triggering questions - and predictions - about what might happen. Would drug dealers hang around the pot shops? Would it bring riffraff into the neighborhood and make shops easy crime targets? Would people abuse the drug? Or smoke and drive, putting others in harm's way? As is evident by millions of dollars in sales each month at Vancouver's retail stores, people certainly use marijuana. And it has had some consequences on the community, but there's apparently no evidence of major behavioral shifts. [continues 2090 words]
It's Relatively Stable, From County Juvenile Court's Standpoint Misdemeanor marijuana-related crimes have plummeted for adults following legalization, but for minors, marijuana is still very much illegal. Marijuana use among children is relatively flat, though children referred to court on suspicion of possessing marijuana went up slightly from 2013 to 2014. "I wouldn't put a cause and effect there," said Eric Gilman, program manager at Clark County Juvenile Court. The numbers are small to begin with - a couple hundred offenses - making it difficult to discern a trend. Over the past decade, there's been a decline in crimes such as minor in possession of marijuana or alcohol. Then again, referrals to juvenile court have been going down across the nation since 1999, Gilman said. In 2009, Clark County Juvenile Court received 3,089 referrals. Over the next five years, the number of referrals went down about 37 percent. [continues 918 words]
Evidence, textual and physical, about the Bard's indulgence. Wanna know how William Shakespeare was so far ahead of his time in regard to wondrous wordplay and wildly imaginative scenes and sonnets? Well, it could be that the loquacious Bard was hitting the bong! According to a recent report in The Independent, forensic analysis of 400-year-old fragments found cannabis residue on pipes and stems scattered on Shakespeare's property. A team from the Institute of Evolutionary Studies in South Africa conducted a chemical analysis of the 17th-century artifacts, excavated in 2001, from Stratford-on-Avon, and found marijuana on eight of 24 clay samples on the grounds, including four pot-positive pipes from his own garden. [continues 664 words]
SEATTLE - Marijuana use appears to have increased as a factor in deadly crashes last year in Washington. New data from the Washington Traffic Safety Commission show the number of drivers involved in fatal crashes with THC in their bodies increased to 75 this past year from 38 in 2013. About half of those 75 drivers had active THC - the main psychoactive chemical in pot - above the level that legally determines intoxication. "We have seen marijuana involvement in fatal crashes remain steady over the years and then it just spiked in 2014," said Dr. Staci Hoff, the commission's research director, in a statement. [continues 164 words]
MARIJUANA Half the drivers with active THC in their blood also were under the influence of alcohol. Marijuana use appears to have increased as a factor in deadly crashes last year in Washington. New data from the Washington Traffic Safety Commission shows the number of drivers involved in fatal crashes with THC in their body increased from 38 in 2013 to 75 this past year. About half those 75 drivers had active THC - the main psychoactive chemical in pot - above the level that legally determines intoxication. [continues 378 words]
Clark County Marijuana Growers, Retail Shops Turn to Tourism, Increasing Presence at Community Events to Attract Customers to Their Products and Facilities With the sun rising and roosters crowing, Josh Miller rolls out of a bed tucked in a greenhouse full of lush marijuana plants and lights up a joint. That's how the Seattle attorney starts his day every time he stays at Tom Lauerman's organic marijuana farm, named the Garden of the Green Sun, in Vancouver. "It's wonderful," Miller said one day last week at the greenhouse. "I do my morning routine. Listen to music, and well, smoke a joint and whatever else comes to me." [continues 973 words]
After 24 Years, and Several Locations, It's Still Going Strong. "Not so sure about hitting Hempfest this year, bro," said my biggest stoner pal TJ, loading yet another fat bowl of black market Blue Dream. "I mean, we legalized it. What's the point?" "I'll tell you why," I replied, sucking down the tube. "As soon as I can remember what the question was!" Amazingly, Hempfest is celebrating its 24th year this weekend. In addition to being the world's largest cannabis rally, Hempfest has always advertised itself as a "protestival," commemorating the advances of cannabis, and protesting the ongoing War on Drugs-and the fact marijuana is still very much illegal at the federal level. [continues 861 words]
U.S. Association of State Legislatures Caution Urged on Tax-Revenue Hopes Lawmakers and others from around the country attended a discussion Wednesday to learn from Washington and Colorado how best to think about legal marijuana and regulate it. But even the experts in the pioneering states don't have all the answers yet, with questions still percolating on how much tax revenue marijuana can generate, and how best to regulate and enforce the use of the substance. Speaking before several hundred people at a panel during a convention of the National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL), Sen. Jeanne Kohl-Welles, D-Seattle, cautioned that Washington state should be careful not to be too optimistic about marijuana-tax revenue. [continues 578 words]