Colorado Suit Uses RICO to Push Off Legal Marijuana Grow
Colorado Suit Uses RICO to Push Off Legal Marijuana Grow
A Colorado lawsuit, filed by two landowners who claim a nearby marijuana grow is devaluing their property, will move to trial today.Scheduled for a session in a Denver federal court, the consequences could set precedent for other cannabis-related concerns.The case, reports Westword.com, was ‘filed in February 2015’ by the Safe Streets Alliance.Safe Streets—a group which claims that recreational marijuana use can “deteriorate neighborhoods—pushed the suit on behalf of members Phillis Windy Hope Reilly and Michael P. Reilly. WestWord notes the alliance’s legal foray was initially amateurish.But despite spelling “marijuana” wrong in its first press release, the group has managed to keep its anti-pot crusade in the courts for three consecutive years.One of the Reilly family’s attorneys said the couple bought property in southern Colorado for “its views of Pikes Peak.” While they’ve built a house on one parcel of rural property, they don’t appear to live full-time in the area.However, Hope and Mike Reilly say they take their children there for outdoors excursions—excursions they suppose are now endangered by the “pungent, foul odors” emanating from a nearby marijuana grow. Identified as Alternative Holistic Healing, the business keeps its plants inside.Then-Colorado Attorney General Christian Sederberg told Westward in 2015 that suits like the SSA’s are undermining the state’s attempts to make its communities safer.“Colorado has demonstrated that regulating marijuana works. Our state has enacted sensible and strict regulations, developed through an inclusive stakeholder process, to ensure quality-controlled marijuana is available through safe and secure businesses,” Sederberg said. “This lawsuit is intended to undermine a set of laws and regulations specifically designed to make our communities safer. We are in the process of eliminating the underground marijuana market in this state. It’s disappointing to see outsiders coming into Colorado with the goal of reversing our progress.”
While the financial and social benefits of marijuana legalization have been contested, the drug nets hundreds of millions in taxes for Colorado each year. Image via Max Pixel. Public domain.
Sources
Marijuana Smell Lawsuit That Could Endanger Colorado Pot Biz Goes to TrialOur Lawsuit to Block the Legalization of MarijuanaPot, property values focus of upcoming Colorado trial
About Ryan J. Farrick
Ryan Farrick is a freelance writer and small business advertising consultant based out of mid-Michigan. Passionate about international politics and world affairs, he’s an avid traveler with a keen interest in the connections between South Asia and the United States. Ryan studied neuroscience and has spent the last several years working as an operations manager in transportation logistics.