Sweet Leaf Marijuana Centers should be stripped of licenses after illegal sales scheme, hearing officer rules

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Alex Pasquariello, The Cannabist

Sweet Leaf Marijuana Center at 2609 Walnut St in Denver, displaying a Notice of Suspension from the City of Denver Department of Excise and Licenses in December 2017/

The Sweet Leaf dispensary chain, shut down in December after a police sting, was a criminal enterprise that pocketed millions from an illicit “looping” scheme that allowed customers to purchase the maximum amount of marijuana multiple times in a day, a municipal hearing officer ruled.

As a result, Sweet Leaf Marijuana Centers should be stripped of its 26 retail, cultivation and manufacturing licenses, according to recommendations released Monday by Denver hearing officer Suzanne Fasing.

“Sweet Leaf’s scheme at the very least permitted the unlawful possession by its customers and its scheme was not the action of a ‘reasonable licensee,’” she wrote. “Not only did Sweet Leaf fail to take action to stop the illegal purchases, but it actively aided and abetted the illegal purchases through its looping scheme.”

Ashley Kilroy, the city’s director of marijuana policy will have the final say on Sweet Leaf’s fate, following a 10-day period for objections and a five-day period for a response. Kilroy’s determination could come in the next few weeks.

Officials for the city of Denver and Sweet Leaf could not be immediately reached for comment.

Sweet Leaf’s licenses were suspended on Dec. 14, when police raided eight Sweet Leaf facilities in Denver and Aurora following a year-long undercover investigation into illegal marijuana sales. More than a dozen arrests of budtenders and customers have been made in connection with the case.

The investigation zeroed in on alleged incidences of “looping,” in which Sweet Leaf budtenders would make repeated sales of up to 1 ounce of recreational marijuana — the maximum allowed for individual possession under Colorado law — to the same customer multiple times in a day.

Looping accounted for at least $6.7 million of medical marijuana sales in the 18-month period that ended when the stores were shut down, and at least $1.5 million in recreational marijuana sales, according to the hearing officer’s report.



Source : Denver Post