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S Dakota Tribe Burns Pot Crop. Weed Resort On Extended Hold.

Stoner4Life

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FLANDREAU, S.D. (AP) — A South Dakota American Indian tribe that sought to open the nation's first marijuana resort burned its crop after federal officials signaled a potential raid, the tribal president said Monday.

Flandreau Santee Sioux President Anthony Reider told The Associated Press the tribe had three weeks of discussions with authorities that culminated with a meeting in Washington that included a Justice Department official and U.S. Attorney for South Dakota Randolph Seiler.

Reider said the tribe wasn't told a raid was imminent — only that one was possible if the government's concerns weren't addressed. He said the main holdup is whether the tribe can sell marijuana to non-Indians, along with the origin of the seeds used for its crop.

Wyn Hornbuckle, a Justice Department spokesman, declined to comment on specific discussions that may have taken place with tribes. Hornbuckle said U.S. attorneys have been directed to assess the threats and circumstances in their districts and consult closely with tribal partners and the Justice Department.

A spokeswoman for Seiler said he would have no comment.

The tribe had planned to open a lounge selling marijuana on New Year's Eve. It was the first tribe in South Dakota to legalize the drug following the U.S. Department of Justice's decision last year to allow tribes to do so on tribal land.

Reider said the tribe made the decision Friday to destroy its marijuana and burned it Saturday. He said tribal officials wanted to avoid a raid that might have damaged equipment or the facility but also wanted to demonstrate good faith as it continues conversations with officials in hopes of resuming the project.

"We just felt it would be best to go in with a clean slate to look for answers on how to proceed so that all sides are comfortable with it," he said.

He said more talks are scheduled this week with Seiler and with state Attorney General Marty Jackley. Jackley said over the weekend that the decision to destroy the crop was "in the best interest of both tribal and non-tribal members."

The legalization of marijuana on the Santee Sioux land came in June, months after the Justice Department outlined a new policy that allows Indian tribes to grow and sell marijuana under the same conditions as some states.

Many tribes have been hesitant to jump into the pot business, and not everyone in Flandreau, about 45 miles north of Sioux Falls, supports the project.

The tribe has said the project could generate up to $2 million a month in profit. But some state officials have questioned the plan, including Jackley, who has said any changes in tribal laws wouldn't affect nontribal land or anyone who wasn't a tribal member.

Tim Purdon, a Minneapolis attorney who served as the U.S. attorney for North Dakota from 2010-2015, said federal officials can raid marijuana operations at any time because cannabis remains illegal under federal law. The new Justice Department policy doesn't change that, he said.

"The whole memorandum is a department policy," said Purdon. "It does not legalize recreational cannabis. It really sets forth the (enforcement) priorities that will be looked at."

He said no operator should expect a stamp of approval from the federal government.

"The Department of Justice is never going to give a tribe or a merchant in a state where it's legalized a letter saying you have permission to do this," Purdon said. "Cannabis remains illegal under federal law. And looking for some sort of advisory opinion from the department saying that what you're doing is OK is never going to happen."
~~~~~~~
Dirk Lammers contributed to this
report from Sioux Falls, S. Dakota.
~~~~~~~
Regina Garcia Cano on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/reginagarciakNO
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
http:// news.yahoo.com/south-dakota-tribe-burned-pot-crop-fear-federal-205534037.html <-----Yahoo link, but the entire article has been copy/pasted above.


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NEVER trust linking to Yahoo pages from ICMag,
they'd sell you out in a New York minute :moon:


Gonna cancel my New Years Eve reservations tomorrow.......


 
Last edited:

mowood3479

Active member
Veteran
So they're still running crops into November in South Dakota? Must be some hardy frost resistant strains ...
Mayb they won't open the weed lounge but no way they burned the crop after it was harvested or near completion. I'm not buyin it
 

mowood3479

Active member
Veteran
But I'd say I burned it too if I thought the fed was gonna raid me..
Oh that.. Ya we burned it last week. It's gone. Nothing to see here, so no need to come out here with ur swat team
 

MicroRoy

Active member
So they're still running crops into November in South Dakota? Must be some hardy frost resistant strains ...
Mayb they won't open the weed lounge but no way they burned the crop after it was harvested or near completion. I'm not buyin it

Its an indoor grow. They burned it so that the feds would not come and destroy their property.

They are working with the feds to make this legal.
 
B

Baked Alaskan

They burned the plants but still have the facility.

The tribe was working with Monarch out of Denver. Monarch built the grow rooms and were gonna get a percent of sales. Now monarch stock is at a penny and will probably go bankrupt, after buying The Big Tomato grow shops.

The way I see it is the tribe got a new grow facility after burning the Monarch plants.

The tribe says it plans on continuing its growop after the federal problem is taken care of. One of the reasons they were told to shut is the origin of the seeds, did the seeds cross state lines for purpose of propagation.
 

Stoner4Life

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The tribe had planned to open a lounge selling marijuana on New Year's Eve. It was the first tribe in South Dakota to legalize the drug following the U.S. Department of Justice's decision last year to allow tribes to do so on tribal land.

they have the right to grow on the reservation, but the feds are fucking them with seed origins and probably the fact that they're willing to sell to the resort guests. the feds are NOT going to make the transition of legality easy. bunch of mofo's.......
 

minds_I

Active member
Veteran
Hello all,

At the risk of pissing people off...why should an American Indian tribe be allowed have special privilege to grow dope?...what makes them phuquing special?

Because their a sovereign nation?? I see the US as a whole as a sovereign nation yet I am subject to local laws that ban outdoor personal cultivation. Why should they be special?



minds_I
 

BlueBlazer

What were we talking about?
Veteran
...why should an American Indian tribe be allowed have special privilege to grow dope?...

Seems to me they don't yet.

Uncle Sam has broken so many treaties with native Americans, what's a few more?

Here's this god awful land no one else wants, you can live there. It's your land for all time . . . unless you find some oil on it, or want to do something with it that will improve your standard of living.
 
Working with the government in any capacity outside of smaller licensing is just begging to get gang fucked by them. Especially in this tumultuous political climate with 2016 looming on the horizon.

The feds are evil on this subject and will be for the foreseeable future. I think the smart money is to wait for the first few waves of big time legal growers to go bankrupt and die off before coming out completely from the underground.
 

BOMBAYCAT

Well-known member
Veteran
I grew up right near there and it seems very strange to me. Normally the tribes tell the government to go to hell and take their horse with them. I guess the argument is over non-Indians buying weed. There must be a very real threat to them to make them burn that much pot.
 

soserthc1

Active member
Sounds to me like that's the issue selling to non Indians or tribe members. I'm pretty sure they wanna make the rest of the world's dollars and not just recycle there own.
I gotta say I just don't agree with the special treatment because our government feels the need to screw ethic groups unless its a basic privilege we all enjoy.
Pot being legal there but not here kinda shit has me sour as hell.
Week after week its OK to grow in this or that state but me and countless others could have our lives destroyed by just 1 knock on the door.
While I don't think anyone should have there land taking from them or anything that they worked for or own. It to me should be legal to all americans before I start worrin about a Indian reservation dealing in mass amounts of pot to non reservation people
 

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