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Council motion crack down on area illegal pot shops

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With hundreds of illegal cannabis shops believed to be operating in Los Angeles, City Councilman Marqueece Harris-Dawson has introduced a pair of motions aimed at cracking down on the businesses, including having them barricaded or padlocked, and a series of escalating fines for their employees.

The motions came after two other council members recently proposed having the Department of Water and Power shut off service to any pot business operating illegally.

Los Angeles City Attorney Mike Feuer announced last month that his office, in coordination with the Los Angeles Police Department, has filed 120 criminal cases against 515 defendants associated with 105 illegal commercial cannabis locations across the city since January.

Closing down illegal pot shops has proven to be a challenge for the city, as it often involves an undercover police operation and other significant law enforcement resources. There are 169 cannabis-related business currently operating legally in the city, according to the Department of Cannabis Regulation, but LAPD Chief Michel Moore said last month that there are hundreds believed to be operating illegally.

Harris-Dawson—who has frequently talked about the negative impact the war on drugs has had on minority communities and has advocated for a special cannabis sales tax to support neighborhoods impacted by it—said in a motion that a significant number of the people charged by Feuer’s office are employees of the businesses, not the owners. The motion says that property and business owners should bear the majority of the responsibility for illegal cannabis operations, and “not the people who work for them.’’

Harris-Dawson says the ability to criminally charge employees should still be an option, but also proposes using the city’s Administrative Citation Enforcement Program (ACE) to discourage repeat offenses by creating escalating fines based on the number of times and individual has been cited.

The ACE program was approved by the City Council in 2014, and is meant to give police officers and Department of Animal Service officers a middle option for nuisance infractions and other quality-of-life concerns between issuing a warning and criminally citing an offender, because officers are often hesitant to take action that could trigger a misdemeanor citation for certain low-level offenses such as a loud party, having a dog off a leash or drinking in public. ACE citations are not handled through the criminal courts but administratively through the city’s ACE program. Fines can escalate up to $1,000 for a third offense under the ACE program.

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