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sabato 28 settembre 2013

Colorado Marijuana Industry Gets $1 Million From Investor Group: It's 'The Next Great American Industry'


The Huffington Post  |  By 

Investors looking for high returns took to Colorado this week and poured more than $1 million into the burgeoning legalized recreational marijuana industry in the state.

In Denver, more than 60 investors from The ArcView Group met with 22 startup marijuana companies -- including several directly involved in marijuana sales or cultivation, which was a first for the investment group -- seeking capital. By the end of the meetings, the investors committed "well over $1 million" to Colorado marijuana companies, ArcView CEO Troy Dayton told The Denver Post.

And it may have been even more, however, due to Colorado's marijuana laws which requires investors to qualify as state residents for three years before making equity investments in a marijuana business, some investors had to cap their deal pens.

ArcView president Steve DeAngelo told Bloomberg Businessweek that more than 90 percent of ArcView's investors at the meeting came from out of state -- meaning the overwhelming majority of them could not invest.

“Colorado has an opportunity to claim a—if not the—leading role in the cannabis industry, if it’s properly financed,” DeAngelo said. “It’s an opportunity to build the first big companies and the first big brands. But it’s going to be difficult for them to do that if they’re unable to get the financing that’s available to every other industry.”

Cannabis business is "the next great American industry," ArcView CEO Dayton said when opening the investment meeting this week and despite the red tape that kept many investors from jumping in, it still certainly seems to be off to a strong start. It has only been about a month since Attorney General Eric Holder announced that the Department of Justice would let the new legal marijuana laws in Colorado and Washington go into effect.

But just because it appears the feds will stay out of the way of Colorado and Washington's nascent recreational marijuana industry, the fact that marijuana is still considered illegal federally, due to the Controlled Substances Act, creates real problems for pot businesses. Issues like taxes, payroll and general banking are all negatively affected because of the federal government's marijuana stance.

“On the banking side it’s been a scary situation. A lot of these businesses have been forced into cash-only operations. They can’t use credit cards and in some cases don’t have active checking accounts,” said Aaron Smith, of the National Cannabis Industry Association, to The Daily Beast. “They pay their payroll in cash and their city and state licensing fees in cash."

Holder has said that the DOJ is "actively considering" how to regulate interactions between banks and marijuana shops that operate within state laws and don't violate other federal law enforcement priorities.

For now, financial institutions and other enterprises that do business with marijuana shops that are in compliance with state laws are unlikely to be prosecuted for money laundering or other federal crimes that could be brought under existing federal drug laws, as long as those pot businesses don't otherwise violate the priorities, a senior Department of Justice official said to HuffPost in August.

And a new trail toward pot business' access to banking, tax reform and protection from the federal government is being blazed by several lawmakers. Rep. Ed Perlmutter (D-Colo.) and Rep. Denny Heck (D-Wash.) are seeking reformed access to banking for marijuana businesses with their "Marijuana Business Access to Banking Act of 2013" (H.R. 2652), Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.) and Americans for Tax Reform president Grover Norquist are working a piece of legislation that would allow for marijuana businesses the take the standard deductions from federal taxes that other non-marijuana businesses can and Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-Calif.) has introduced the "Respect State Marijuana Laws Act of 2013" (H.R. 1523) which seeks to further protect a person acting in compliance with state laws relating to the production, possession, distribution or delivery of marijuana.

Recreational marijuana businesses are expected to start opening their doors in Colorado beginning around Jan. 1, 2014. Earlier this month, Colorado became the first state in the U.S. to adopt rules for legal, recreational marijuana sales.

The ArcView Investor Network, founded in 2010, is comprised of about 80 investors from the United States and abroad, many of whom are already involved in the marijuana industry. Back in May, the group committed $1 million to marijuana industry startups at a similar Seattle, Wash. event.

Colorado Marijuana Industry Gets $1 Million From Investor Group: It's 'The Next Great American Industry'

domenica 22 settembre 2013

FBI: One Marijuana Arrest Every 42 Seconds in U.S. in 2012; More Than for All Violent Crimes Combined

New York is the world's cannabis arrest capitol
Despite predictions that the war on pot will ratchet down after Colorado and Washington State voters legalized the forbidden flower last fall, FBI data show that over 750,000 cannabis smokers were arrested last year in the US, according to Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, a pro-pot police group.

Police arrest more people each year for weed than for all violent crimes. “Every time a police officer makes an arrest for drugs, that’s several hours out of his or her day not spent going after real criminals. As the country has been investing more and more of its resources into prosecuting drug ‘crime,’ the rate of unsolved violent crime has been steadily increasing. Where are our priorities here?” asked retired lieutenant commander Diane Goldstein, another LEAP speaker.

“Each one of those arrests is the story of someone who may suffer a variety of adverse effects from their interaction with the justice system,” said former cop and LEAP executive director Neill Franklin. It is also several hours of time that the officer will be processing paperwork and running the pothead through the legal system—policing time taxpapers will never recoup.

Citing recently-released FBI data, LEAP calculates that nearly 90% of all cannabis arrests are for possession, nabbing small-time recreational stoners and sticking them with court fines, fees, and criminal records. That means the war on pot preys upon the American poor.

The cannabis arrest numbers actually declined slightly from 2011, but are still a major concern to advocates who believe our limited law enforcement dollars can be better spent. “Where are our priorities here?” asked Diane Goldstein, a retired California cop. Goldstein says that the rate of unsolved crime is steadily increasing in the US, while law enforcement continue to engage in acostly war against domestic pot smokers.


FBI: One Marijuana Arrest Every 42 Seconds in U.S. in 2012; More Than for All Violent Crimes Combined

domenica 1 settembre 2013

USA - Legalizzazione cannabis. Governo Federale non ricorrera' contro leggi statali

A livello federale il consumo di marijuana resta un reato. Ma il dipartimento di Giustizia non ha alcuna intenzione di contrastare le legislazioni di Stati come Colorado e Washington che hanno invece permesso l'uso della cannabis, in quest'ultimi due casi anche a scopi ricreativi. E' questo l'approccio - ribattezzato "trust but verify", fidati ma verifica - che il ministro della Giustizia, Eric Holder, ha deciso di adottare rispetto ai 20 Stati americani che hanno legalizzato l'uso della marijuana per scopi medici. In un memo diffuso ai procuratori federali di tutto il Paese, sono state descritte otto priorità volte di fatto ad impedire la vendita della marijuana ai bambini, l'attività di cartelli del narcotraffico, la distribuzione della cannabis a livello interstatale e la violenza e gli incidenti che chiamano in causa la droga. Insomma, Holder vuole che i procuratori federali si concentrino su veri e propri crimini legati alla marijuana senza dunque perdere tempo sul suo semplice possesso. Il ministero della Giustizia si riserva però il diritto di rivedere la propria posizione se i singoli Stati non adotteranno misure adeguate per controllare l'uso e la distribuzione della cannabis.

 USA - Legalizzazione cannabis. Governo Federale non ricorrera' contro leggi statali

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