DOJ Gives Yellow Light to Pot Shops on Indian Reservations

It’s not
clear that any Indian reservations are clamoring to sell pot along
with cheap smokes and chances to win at blackjack. But if they want
to explore this new revenue option,
that apparently is OK
with the U.S. Justice Department,
provided they follow the same guidelines that states with legal
marijuana are expected to keep in mind.

Yesterday the Justice Department issued a
memo
that extends the logic of its August 2013
guidance
concerning marijuana cases to Indian Country. Should
any reservations decide to allow marijuana cultivation and sales,
the new guidance says, U.S. attorneys should focus on cases that
implicate the “federal law enforcement priorities” listed in that
earlier memo, which include interstate smuggling, sales to minors,
and links to criminal organizations. The implication is that if
reservations establish “robust and effective regulatory systems,”
prosecuting growers and retailers who comply with them would not be
a good use of federal resources.

At the same time, reservations that do not allow marijuana can
still call upon the Justice Department to enforce that ban, even if
they are located in states that have legalized the drug. According
to John Walsh, the U.S. attorney for Colorado, that assurance was
the main goal of the memo.

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