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Los Angeles International Airport has seen arrests surge 166 percent
since marijuana was legalized across the state of California in 2016.
Authorities
at LAX say airline passengers carrying small amounts of marijuana have
been emboldened by reduced marijuana possession penalties, but that drug
traffickers stuffing entire checked bags with pot have also been
apprehended in much larger numbers.
More smugglers are hopping
onto flights out of California to escape the state's saturated weed
market, police and defense lawyers told The Los Angeles Times.
California legalized the use, production and sales of recreational
marijuana with the passing of 2016's Prop 64, which went into effect
January 1, 2018.
But regardless of California's state laws on
marijuana, the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) and
the federal government — which still views marijuana as an
illegal Schedule 1 narcotic alongside heroin, cocaine and LSD —
prohibits interstate travel with marijuana.
The California Bureau of
Cannabis Control, a state agency, dodged a fight with the DEA and other
federal authorities and prohibited the export of marijuana to other
states.
However, the Los Angeles Police Department allows LAX
passengers with small amounts of marijuana to pass through security --
but not smoke -- at the airport. And authorities caution that passengers
face arrest or charges at their destination should they be headed
toward any state where marijuana is not legal.
LAX, the world's
fourth-busiest airport, is quickly becoming a marijuana hub alongside
California's other major airports for passengers with small amounts of
pot for personal use they perhaps "forgot" as well as those carrying
several pounds of vaccuum-sealed marijuana packages.
“We intercept
large quantities of marijuana regularly,” said Sgt. Ray Kelly of the
Alameda County Sheriff’s Office, which has jurisdiction over Oakland
International Airport, in an interview with The Los Angeles Times. “We
find it in about 50-pound quantities… the carry-on rate for luggage. I
would imagine we’re only intercepting some of it, not all of it.”
California is the top marijuana-producing
state in the country, pushing out 13.5 million pounds of marijuana in
2016, which is about five times more than state residents consumed. The
massive surplus has driven — or in this case, flown — people out of the
state for business and consumers in states where stricter marijuana
policies are enforced. Additionally, authorities say hundreds of
passengers who forget that federal authorities have dominion over the
country's skies are increasingly being apprehended with small pouches
and viles containing marijuana in both their carry-on or checked bags.
LAX
arrest records showed the most popular flight destinations for pot
smugglers were Chicago, Indianapolis, Atlanta and Dallas. In 2018, which
was the first year for legalized recreational pot use in California,
LAX police made 101 trafficking arrests. In 2017, there were only 38
arrests and in 2016 there were only twenty.
“Since
pot’s been legalized in California, there’s no money to be made because
everyone got involved in it,” said Bill Kroger Jr., a veteran criminal
defense lawyer who specializes in marijuana cases. “They’ve got these
big 50,000-square-foot [grow] houses, and they’re flooding the market.
The money is outside of California.”
“This is normal procedure for these guys, and I would say 29 out of 30 times they make it through without a problem,” he added.
California
state officials have squabbled with federal authorities in the past few
years, as marijuana remains a Schedule 1 narcotic according to the
federal government and Drug Enforcement Agency.
Last Wednesday, the
attorneys general of 38 states and territories sent a letter to
Congress urging them to allow residents to store money generated from
cannabis and marijuana businesses into banks.
"This is simple: Not incorporating an $8.3 billion industry into our
banking system is hurting our public safety and economy," California
Attorney General Xavier Becerra, who signed the letter, said in a statement.
"The SAFE Banking Act would reward taxpayers and small and local
licensed businesses who play by the rules. We urge Congress to pass
legislation to meet the demands of our growing economy."
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