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Colorado Sued by Neighboring States Over Legal Marijuana

Christie Lunsford of Dixie Elixirs & Edibles in Denver holds a container of marijuana trim that is used to infuse their products. (Credit: Los Angeles Times)

A pair of states on Thursday filed a lawsuit with the U.S. Supreme Court in an effort to strike down Colorado’s laws that legalize recreational marijuana.

Citing federal antidrug laws, particularly interstate drug trafficking, Nebraska and Oklahoma said in the lawsuit that Colorado’s  marijuana laws have “created a dangerous gap in the federal drug-control system enacted by the United States Congress.”

In 2012, Coloradans voted in support of Amendment 64, which legalized the recreational sale and use of up to an ounce of marijuana for any resident over the age of 21. Moreover, under Amendment 64, Coloradans can grow up to six marijuana plants for personal use.

“The result of increased Colorado-sourced marijuana being trafficked in [Nebraska and Oklahoma] due to the passage and implementation of Colorado Amendment 64 has been the diversion of a significant amount of the personnel time, budget, and resources” of those states, wrote Nebraska Atty. Gen. Jon Bruning and Oklahoma Atty. Gen. E. Scott Pruitt in the court filing.

Click here to read the full story on LATimes.com.