In today’s edition of Buzzkill News, a California sheriff appeals to feds in pot ‘state of emergency.’ A state of emergency due to weed in California? Is this for real?
Last month in California’s far-north Siskiyou County, supervisors voted to declare a “state of emergency” over illegal marijuana cultivation. And now, Jon Lopey, the hardline California sheriff, is appealing to feds due to a pot “state of emergency.” In other words, he’s calling upon U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions for federal aid in his war on cannabis.
“I told him what the situation was here … [that] you should be concerned, because most of this illicit cannabis is going across state lines to other states, to contaminate other jurisdictions,” Lopey summed up in his letter to Sessions, according to the Redding Record Searchlight. “Don’t forget the rural counties.”
A spokesperson for the federal Justice Department responded to the Record Searchlight‘s query about the letter but was not immediately able to confirm receipt. Lopey declined to provide a copy to the paper. A representative of the California Office of Emergency Services said the agency is still weighing Lopey’s request for aid.
Lopey’s efforts to suppress illegal grows in the county have triggered frequent raids, with an estimated $273 million in cannabis seized over the past year.
In fact, big militarized raids have continued across the Emerald Triangle, even as California is on a countdown to legalization. But Siskiyou authorities are being particularly aggressive.
Local KOBI5 TV reported October 5 that both California Highway Patrol and National Guard troops joined Lopey’s deputies in 19 raids that day. There were 50 warrants served on grow operations over the past weeks.
Sgt. Mike Gilley, who oversees the county’s Marijuana Eradication Team said: “This area has just exploded with gardens, it seems to be getting more and more every year. We hit these ones and then sometimes they get replanted a week or two later.”
According to the report, each grow-op usually holds at least 100 plants. Authorities said the majority of the marijuana is getting shipped to the East Coast, where plants rake in $5,000-$6,000 each. By their estimate, one garden can yield around $550,000.
Does this report add up?
A yield of one pound per plant is very optimistic. And Forbes reported in January that with the cannabis bubble finally bursting, prices have taken a nose-dive.
In fact, wholesale marijuana prices declined in 2016 from $2,500 to $1,000 per pound, with an ounce fetching as little as $65. Prices are higher on the East Coast, where we can generously assume a pre-bust price of $300 for an ounce of the good stuff, which would at least get us in the ballpark of Lopey’s figures.
But there’s a lot of middle-men taking a cut by the time it gets down to retail sales. So the notion that a single garden is reaping over half a million in sales is dubious at best, and the notion that such sums are making it back to Siskiyou County is frankly absurd.
And in any case, the idea that cannabis is a “contaminating” substance is pretty out of step with an America that is rapidly embracing medical marijuana and outright legalization. So if a California sheriff appeals to feds in pot ‘state of emergency’, we like to think that the sheriff in question is simply behind the times. You know, like the majority of our current administration.
In the ever-evolving world of cannabinoid products, Binoid has emerged as a go-to brand for…
One thing that’s clear is that THCA flower isn’t going anywhere any time soon. In…
Rappers Xzibit and Snoop Dogg have each opened dispensaries in California, aiming to bring the…
Coir is widely utilized by numerous cannabis companies worldwide due to its ease of use…
He was already big enough to control one ton of racing beast. But could he…