Yet more not-exactly-thought-through fallout from Colorado's marijuana laws
From the LA Times:
Colorado's neighbors dismayed by new wave of marijuana traffic
Law enforcement officers in the smaller, often isolated counties in
states ringing Colorado say their departments shudder under the weight
of Colorado pot flowing illegally across the border. Drug arrests are
rising, straining already strapped budgets in places where marijuana
remains illegal.
"It has just devastated these smaller agencies," says Tom Gorman,
director of the federally funded Rocky Mountain High Intensity Drug
Trafficking Area program, a network of law enforcement organizations in
four Western states. "The marijuana laws [in Colorado] were supposed to
eliminate the black market. But in effect they have become the black
market."
A study by his organization last year found that between
2005 and 2012, the amount of seized Colorado pot heading for other
states increased 400%. Although it is legal for adults to possess small
amounts of marijuana in Colorado, it remains against the law to take it
out of the state.
But most agree it's fantasy to think that won't happen.
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