Home hash oil extraction is illegal: Colorado Attorney General

By

Colorado's Attorney General on Tuesday said the state's landmark marijuana legalization law does not allow people to extract the drug's potent hash oil from plants in their home.

Attorney General John Suthers said Amendment 64, which was passed by voters in 2012 and legalized recreational marijuana for adults, "expressly prohibits" people from personally producing butane hash oil due in part to the threat it poses to the public.

"To decriminalize dangerous and unreasonable behavior in which people are getting hurt and houses are blowing up, defies the intent of the voters," Suthers said in a statement.

"Colorado is experiencing a real public safety issue as a result of unsafe and unlicensed manufacturing and production," he added.

Suthers earlier this month filed a brief in a Mesa County criminal case against Eugene Christenson, who allegedly caused an explosion at his home while attempting to produce the oil.

The Denver Post said dozens of explosions have been sparked at homes across the state this year due to amateur attempts at hash oil extraction.

In May, Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper signed legislation regulating the amount of concentrated marijuana that can be sold to an individual.

The bill closed a legal gap that treated one ounce of leafy pot the same as an equivalent amount of more powerful forms, like hash oil.

Tags
Marijuana, Colorado
Join the Discussion
More News
Trump

GOP Senator Theorizes That Epstein Was a Federal Asset After FBI Declares No 'Client List': 'The Dots Don't Add Up Cleanly'

Dead Body Found Wrapped in a Tarp in Goodwill Donation

Dead Body Found Wrapped in a Tarp in Goodwill Donation Bin

Man Was Held in Alaska ICE Detention for Weeks. Now

Toddler Dies After Being Left in Hot Car for Hours While Mom Got Lip Injections: Police

Jeffrey Epstein

Epstein's Brother Scoffs at FBI's Report Declaring He Killed Himself: 'I Laughed at How Stupid It Was'