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The Justice Department is rescinding critical rules directing the federal government to keep its hands off of states' legal marijuana

Jeff Sessions' opening salvo in his vendetta against marijuana has arrived. But state lawmakers, who will be responsible for enforcing the law, aren't happy.

  • Attorney General Jeff Sessions will rescind the Obama-era policy that directs the federal government to avoid prosecuting state-legalized marijuana.
  • The policy, known as the Cole Memo, lays out enforcement priorities for the federal government, with a focus on limiting supply to the black market and keeping marijuana out of minors' hands.
  • The policy allows individual states to decide whether to enforce federal law.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Attorney General Jeff Sessions is rescinding the Obama-era policy that had paved the way for legalized marijuana to flourish in states across the country, two people with knowledge of the decision told The Associated Press. Sessions will instead let federal prosecutors decide how aggressively to enforce federal marijuana laws in states where pot has become legal, the people said.

Sessions, a longtime opponent of marijuana, has hinted at initiating a federal crack down on state-legal marijuana businesses for the better part of a year.

Cannabis-related stocks got slammed after the news broke on Thursday morning, falling as much as 35%.

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The move by President Donald Trump’s attorney general likely will add to confusion about whether it’s alright to grow, buy, or use marijuana in states where pot is legal, since long-standing federal law prohibits it. While ma number of states have voted to legalize

The news of Sessions' plan comes just days after pot shops opened in California, launching what is expected to become the world’s largest market for legal recreational marijuana.

Sessions is rescinding the Cole Memorandum, a 2013 directive from the Obama administration that

The Justice Department released a memo on Thursday indicating the end of the Cole Memo.

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Eight states and the District of Columbia have legalized marijuana for recreational use, and California’s sales alone are projected to bring in $1 billion annually in tax revenue within several years. The pot business has already started to become a sophisticated, multimillion-dollar industry whose tax dollars help fund schools, educational programs, and law enforcement.

Sen. Cory Gardner, a Colorado Republican, lashed out at Sessions' move on Twitter on Thursday.

And Sen. Rand Paul, a Kentucky Republican, told a reporter on Thursday that the "federal government has better things to focus on," than cracking down on marijuana.

"I continue to believe that this is a states’ rights issue," Paul added.

Sessions and some law enforcement officials in states such as Colorado blame legalization for a number of problems, including drug traffickers that take advantage of lax marijuana laws to illegally grow and ship the drug across state lines, where it can sell for much more.

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Sessions' decision was a win for pot opponents who had been urging action.

“There is no more safe haven with regard to the federal government and marijuana, but it’s also the beginning of the story and not the end,” said Kevin Sabet, president and CEO of Smart Approaches to Marijuana, who was among several anti-marijuana advocates who met with Sessions last month. “This is a victory. It’s going to dry up a lot of the institutional investment that has gone toward marijuana in the last five years.”

Threats of a federal crackdown have united liberals who object to the human costs of a war on pot with conservatives who see it as a states’ rights issue. Some in law enforcement support a tougher approach, but a bipartisan group of senators in March urged Sessions to uphold existing marijuana policy. Others in Congress have been seeking ways to protect and promote legal cannabis businesses.

Sessions convened a task force to study pot policy, but the group made no recommendations for upending the legal industry. Instead, it encouraged Justice Department officials to keep reviewing the Obama administration’s more hands-off approach to enforcement, something Sessions has promised to do since he took office.

The change represents yet another way that Sessions, who served as a federal prosecutor at the height of the drug war in Mobile, Alabama, has reversed Obama-era criminal justice policies aimed at easing overcrowding in federal prisons and rethinking of how drug criminals are prosecuted and sentenced. While his Democratic predecessor Eric Holder told federal prosecutors to avoid seeking long mandatory minimum sentences when charging some lower-level drug offenders, for example, Sessions issued an order demanding the opposite, telling them to pursue the most serious charges possible against most suspects.

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