The pot business may be legal, but newspapers can’t run ads for it, the U.S. Postal Service says
Federal Eye
The pot business may be legal, but newspapers cant run ads for it, the U.S. Postal Service says
By Lisa Rein December 21
@Reinlwapo
Newspapers in half the states are breaking the law if they mail publications containing ads for marijuana products even though the states have legalized pot, the U.S. Postal Service said last week.
This parsing of
federal law, released by postal officials as national policy after inquiries from Oregons congressional delegation, is one of the messy consequences of the movement to legalize cannabis: Its bought, sold and advertised for recreational and medical use in some states, but still illegal under federal law.
The confusion started in Portland, Ore., where local newspapers have been running ads for dispensaries and manufacturers in the states now-booming weed industry after voters legalized recreational pot for adults last year, following medical pot in 1998. ... In November, Portlands postal district issued a memo to newspaper publishers, telling them they are breaking the law by running ads for pot and using the U.S. mail to deliver their papers.
The reason? The U.S. Postal Service is a federal entity. Even though Oregon, Washington, Colorado and Alaska have legalized recreational marijuana and 23 other states have legalized medical pot, any newspaper running ads in those states violates a federal law preventing advertising for illicit goods.