Senators from both
parties try to ease banking for marijuana businesses
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[May 18, 2017]
By Lisa Lambert
WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - Republican and Democratic senators on Wednesday renewed
their drive to make banking easier for marijuana-based businesses in
those U.S. states where the drug is legal, undeterred by signals from
the Trump administration about maintaining tough marijuana restrictions
nationally.
The eight senators, who spanned the political spectrum from
libertarian-leaning Republican Rand Paul to liberal Democrat Cory
Booker, introduced the bill to block federal banking regulators from
somehow pushing a financial institution to stop serving a
state-sanctioned marijuana business or the businesses' landlords or
lawyers.
The government would also not be allowed to give banks incentives to cut
off the businesses.
While marijuana is legal for medicinal or recreational use in 44 states,
the federal government still considers it an illegal and highly
dangerous drug.
Under former President Barack Obama, a Democrat, regulators gave banks
guidance on working with cannabis-related businesses and staying within
the law. But the guidance intimidated most financial institutions and
they cut ties with the sector, saying compliance with extensive
requirements was too expensive and did not assure them they would not be
prosecuted in the future.
The current situation leads dispensaries to either deal all in cash or
hide their business' true nature from banks, creating public-safety and
legal risks, lawmakers say.
The unlikely collection of senators sponsoring Wednesday's bill have
attempted to get similar legislation approved before, and gained wider
support with each try. That could help the legislation pass the closely
divided Senate.
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Cannabis grower Steve Dillon tends to his plants on his farm in
Humboldt County, California, U.S. August 28, 2016. REUTERS/Rory
Carroll
Since
President Donald Trump took office in January, marijuana advocates have staged
demonstrations in Washington, including distributing hundreds of free joints on
inauguration day.
But last week, Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who has long opposed easing pot
restrictions, ordered the Justice Department to toughen prosecutions of all
magnitudes of drug crimes. He has also made drugs a top issue for his
crime-reduction task force.
Proponents of legalizing pot, meanwhile, were worried by a statement Trump
released when he signed a massive spending bill at the beginning of the month.
In part, Trump used the statement to signal that he would like to go after
states' medical marijuana laws. The spending bill bars Justice from using any
funds to block states from implementing those laws, a prohibition that Trump
said goes against his constitutional responsibility to faithfully execute
federal laws.
(Reporting by Lisa Lambert; Editing by Tom Brown)
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