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Wednesday, June 6, 2012

New Study Finds Marijuana Dispensaries Not Linked To Crime

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Marijuana Dispensary jar

By Steve Elliott of Toke of the Town
Medical marijuana dispensaries are not linked to neighborhood crime, according to a new study funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
The University of California at Los Angeles study, published in the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, found that neighborhoods with medicinal cannabis dispensaries in Sacramento were no more likely to have crime than other neighborhoods, reports Jason Koebler at U.S. News.
According to the study’s authors, their new research may debunk a 2009 report from the California Police Chiefs Association that claimed marijuana dispensaries “have been tied to organized criminal gangs, foster large [marijuana growth] operations, and are often multi-million-dollar profit centers.”
Such arguments are commonly used by opponents of medical marijuana legalization. So far, 17 states and the District of Columbia have allowed the medicinal use of cannabis by authorized patients.
“There’s law enforcement and city officials debating whether these dispensaries were attracting undesirables, and there’s the other side, the dispensary owners, saying maybe these concerns were unfounded,” said the new study’s coauthor, Nancy Kepple, a doctoral student at the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs. “But neither side had any evidence that supported either claim.”
The UCLA study examined crime rates in 95 areas of Sacramento in 2009, before the city enacted regulations on where dispensaries could be located and had fewer restrictions on the security measures dispensary operators had to meet.
“Whatever security measures were done, the owners chose to do it for themselves [in 2009],” Kepple said. “We specifically selected this time because it was based on a free-market situation.”
The researchers aren’t sure why they observed no increase in crime around dispensaries, but they suspect that hired security guards and surveillance cameras had an impact. Or it could be, as Kepple speculated in the report, that cannabis dispensaries just don’t increase crime “more than any other facility in a commercially-zoned area.”
Although a few high-profile murders have taken place in San Francisco and Hollywood dispensaries, those cases aren’t representative of any larger trend, according to Kepple and her coauthor, Bridget Freisthler.
“Because of the type of business dispensaries are, any crime there has been well-publicized, bringing more attention to the issue,” Freisthler said. “Neighborhood residents get up in arms and it takes a life of its own.”
Marijuana dispensaries appear to be no more likely to be victimized by burglars than are liquor stores or other commercial enterprises, according to Freisthler.
The authors said they need to study crime rates in other cities and over time to determine whether dispensaries have long-term impacts on neighborhood crime.
“This is really just the start, and [our findings] seem contrary to what the public debate has been saying,” Kepple said. “We wanted to start thinking about the debate from a scientific standpoint.”