Demand for medical pot in Colorado outstripping supply

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http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_13605814

Demand for medical pot in Colorado outstripping supply
By Mike McPhee and Victoria Barbatelli
The Denver Post
POSTED: 10/21/2009 01:00:00 AM MDT


Demand for medical marijuana in Colorado has grown so fast in the past few months that it has outstripped the production of legal "grow" operations and is now probably being supplied by international drug cartels, say some local sheriffs and agents from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.

And as dispensaries proliferate throughout the state, police and lawyers say they are worried about the peripheral crime rising around the shops intended to function as pharmacies, selling medical marijuana prescribed to people who suffer one of eight conditions, ranging from chronic pain to glaucoma.

"Dispensaries are popping up like mushrooms," said DEA special agent-in-charge Jeffrey Sweetin. "Now we have thousands of 20- to 25-year-olds carrying cards. And the cartels are getting rich off this law."

Last summer, the Colorado Board of Health declined to limit the number of patients that medical marijuana dispensaries could service.

The result, health department spokesman Mark Salley said, was a boom in the number of people who received cards allowing them to purchase medical pot. There are now 13,000 people in possession of such cards.

Colorado, which approved medical marijuana in 2000, is one of 14 states that permit it.

The number of Colorado dispensaries is not tracked by the state health department or any other agency.

Legal grow operations linked to dispensaries are limited to six cannabis plants each.

By contrast, most of the street pot comes from big, outdoor grows, such as the three operations — within a 5-mile radius of Chatfield Reservoir — busted by DEA officials last summer. Sweetin said one grow had 14,000 plants that averaged 5 to 6 feet tall.

He said the average illegal indoor grow is 100 to 200 plants averaging 3 feet tall.

Sheriff Bill Masters of San Miguel County, which includes Telluride, said the number of medical-marijuana users in his county has grown so fast that he, too, is concerned about where the dope is coming from.

"The numbers don't seem to add up to me," he said. "It seems difficult to supply people with the number of plants allowed. My suspicions are that marijuana might be coming from other growers."

Competition among dispensaries has become intense, and security concerns are rising.

Last month, several men wearing jackets identifying themselves as federal agents attempted to rob a marijuana dispensary in the 1900 block of South Cherry Street in Denver.

According to police, the dispensary operators drew weapons and a gunfight erupted in the street. No one was reported injured and no arrests were made, police said.

Last weekend, the U.S. Department of Justice issued a directive advising prosecutors not to pursue cases against medical-marijuana users and suppliers who follow state laws.

"Supply (of marijuana) is not directly addressed in (state law), and we think it's one of the areas that could lead to criminal elements being involved," said Longmont city attorney Eugene Mei, noting that the city is seeking a 90-day moratorium on new dispensaries.

In the wake of the Justice Department advisory, the DEA's Sweetin said "it's business as usual" in terms of enforcement. "We're leaving cancer patients alone," he said. "But we're not being told to leave the dispensaries alone.

"We are looking at dispensaries that are not in clear and unambiguous compliance with the state law. We are looking at dispensaries that are using the state law to circumvent federal law."

There is big money to be made in medical marijuana.

At the Peace in Medicine dispensary at 20th and Arapahoe streets in Denver, near the federal courthouse, a quarter-ounce of high-grade pot sells for $120. Good-quality pot on the street sells for an average of $80 per quarter ounce, according to an active user.

"This economy is feeding the illegal organized crime element. They are getting their money in the range of hundreds of thousands of dollars," Sweetin said. "The dispensaries are paying their bills, their weaponry, their profits."

Mike McPhee: 303-954-1409 or [email protected]
 
"Dispensaries are popping up like mushrooms," said DEA special agent-in-charge durp-dee-durp

lol, really?

Gee, our economy isn't fucked up or anything right now, if they're REALLY worried about 'international cartels' stepping up to the plate... why not just GROW MORE POT LEGALLY HERE?!??


According to police, the dispensary operators drew weapons and a gunfight erupted in the street. No one was reported injured and no arrests were made, police said.


....and maybe people could make some money teaching firearms training courses too *cough*
 
"Dispensaries are popping up like mushrooms," said DEA special agent-in-charge Jeffrey Sweetin. "Now we have thousands of 20- to 25-year-olds carrying cards. And the cartels are getting rich off this law."
actually they're losing money you fucking idiot
 
what an incredibly inacurrate article. got the prices wrong, got the growing limits wrong...fucking stupid. the production of local pot is picking up speed. growers can legally have up to 99 plants in a house if they are all legally accounted for.

more than anything. . . there is not an increase in demand for fucking pot! there are the same amount of smokers, they're just not considered criminals now... dumb-fuck talking heads.
 
Why can't consumers grow their own?

In the wake of the Justice Department advisory, the DEA's Sweetin said "it's business as usual" in terms of enforcement. "We're leaving cancer patients alone," he said. "But we're not being told to leave the dispensaries alone.

Bovine_Excrement(2)(1).gif
 
I used to live in Aspen, CO, but stupidly left just a couple months before this was initiated. My landlord was a cancer patient, but hated weed and told me she would get me all she could through the program, hehe.
 
I'm a patient and caregiver that supplies dispensaries with medicinal edibles all over Colorado. The article has some truths and some misinformation. There are ALOT of shady dispensaries in downtown Denver, run by the cartels, that rip people off and identify theft alot of patients. I only do business with locally run dispensaries that are wholesome and put the patient first. It all depends on where you go...I've talked to the police chief in Boulder and he said that medicinal marijuana is the absolute least of his worries. The police in Boulder and Denver only target shady dispensaries that are fucking people over when they intervene. None of the places Ive ever gone to have had problems...

medicinal marijuana is here to stay! dispensaries are poppin up everywhere, its completely mainstream, and everybody and their grandmothers (literally, I have supplied 70 year old women with cancer with edibles) have their license


well thats just my two cents
 
Coffeeshops and dispenseries are my favorite places to go hang out, the vast majority are very well run and nice, not very shady at all. And for once the cartels are making less money because almost all the pot I buy is grown localy in Colorado by legal caregivers.
 
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