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Feds haven’t weighed in on Washington, Colorado pot legalization

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(MCT) — SACRAMENTO, Calif. — In October 2010, with a quixotic marijuana initiative leading in California polls, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder answered an urgent letter from retired heads of the federal Drug Enforcement Administration.

“Let me state clearly that the Department of Justice strongly opposes Proposition 19,” Holder wrote, declaring he would “vigorously enforce” federal law if California voters passed the measure, which would have legalized recreational marijuana use for adults over 21 and allowed retail sales of pot.

This year, Holder notably declined to respond as the retired DEA administrators sent him another anxious letter expressing opposition to marijuana legalization efforts. This time, voters in two states, Washington and Colorado, each voted by 55 to 45 percent margins to legalize marijuana beyond medical use, upping the stakes in America’s marijuana debate.

California, which passed America’s first medical marijuana initiative in 1996 and pushed the envelope on legalization in 2010, has become an also-ran in the discussion. The state also lags in regulation of medical cannabis.

“It feels like you guys are still going through the awkward step of adolescence, and Colorado and Washington have gone on to the next step,” said Sam Kamin, a professor at the University of Denver’s Sturm College of Law who researches marijuana policy.

In California, where Holder’s letter was widely publicized and flipped the polls as Proposition 19 went down to defeat, marijuana advocates hope successful legalization votes elsewhere will at least persuade the Legislature to regulate the state’s existing medical marijuana industry, which operates in an amorphous legal haze.

“This is called a game-changer,” said Ellen Komp, California deputy director for the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws. The group backed failed legislation this year to license California medical marijuana dispensaries and growers in hopes that stricter state oversight would help repel an ongoing federal crackdown.

“No one thought we were going to get a full legalization measure anywhere. … Now everyone is waiting to see what the federal response will be in Colorado and Washington.”

Don Duncan is California director of Americans for Safe Access, an advocacy group for medical marijuana users. He said the developments in Colorado and Washington may make it easier to persuade California lawmakers — who have been wary of being seen as champions for marijuana stores — to set rules for the state’s medical cannabis industry when a new bill is introduced in January.

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