SEC Ignores Federal Law, Lets Marijuana Biz Offer Stocks (government hypocrites)

Discussion in 'Marijuana News' started by jainaG, Oct 11, 2015.

  1. http://www.judicialwatch.org/blog/2015/01/sec-ignores-federal-law-lets-marijuana-biz-offer-stocks/





    The United States government is helping a California-based company
    perpetrate a crime by letting it offer public stocks in its marijuana
    business, even though the drug's cultivation and sale are both illegal
    under federal law.
    As unbelievable as it may seem, the U.S. Securities and Exchange
    Commission (SEC), the government agency responsible for enforcing the
    nation's securities laws and protecting investors, is permitting a
    marijuana dealer to register shares. Pot may have been legalized-for
    medicinal and recreational use-in nearly two dozen states (including the
    District of Columbia), but it remains illegal under federal law. For a
    federal agency to approve its official sale is downright insane.

    This perplexing news comes from a variety of sources, including a publication, Marijuana Business Daily,
    that professes to be the No. 1 information resource for the U.S.
    medical marijuana and retail cannabis industry. In a recent article it
    celebrates the SEC's pot endorsement as a magnificent move that “could
    fuel investor interest in marijuana stocks and encourage dispensaries,
    cultivation businesses and edibles producers to go public.” These sorts
    of businesses have refrained from going public, the article points out,
    in large part because they're unsure how the SEC would react. Now we
    know that the feds like the idea.

    The cannabis trailblazer is Terra Tech and
    it's based in Irvine California. Its vision is to help transform,
    through innovation, the global population through methods that are both
    sustainable as well as environmentally friendly. This is language taken
    straight from its company website. In it Terra Tech also claims to be
    pioneering the future by integrating the best of the natural world with
    technology to create sustainable solutions for food production, indoor
    cultivation, rare and exotic plants and agricultural research and
    development. It sounds like someone has been smoking something potent.

    The SEC rubber stamp indicates that, although marijuana violates
    federal law, the government isn't going to prevent investors and
    businesses from entering the trade, the CEO of Terra Tech said in a
    local newspaper article.
    This, in turn, will likely increase the amount of investment capital
    that will flow into the industry. “This gives them more faith that no
    one is going to stop the industry's growth,” the CEO, Derek Peterson,
    said. He predicts that weed will be completely legal in America in
    around 5 to 10 years. “Momentum is building in the industry and that has
    a way of accelerating progress,” the pot CEO said in a separate
    publication appropriately called High Times.

    Those familiar with the SEC may not be surprised at this latest
    transgression. The fact is that the agency has long been embroiled in
    scandal and, like many regulatory government entities, is well known for
    being inept. Judicial Watch has followed the SEC closely and reported
    on many of its scandals, including the fact that, although it's charged
    with policing the nation's financial industry, it was preoccupied with pornography while
    the economy crumbled. The country's financial system collapsed while
    employees and high-ranking managers at the SEC regularly spent work
    hours gawking at pornography web sites on their government computers,
    according to a 2010 agency inspector general investigation.

    A year earlier two enforcement officials at the SEC were investigated
    by the Justice Department for illegal insider trading. The agency
    attorneys had access to sensitive information relating to agency probes
    and drew suspicion with unusually frequent stock trades over a two-year
    period. In 2012 a former assistant inspector general sued
    the SEC claiming that he was fired for reporting wrongdoing, including
    security breaches and misconduct among top officers. Before that the SEC
    came under fire for wasting nearly $557 million on luxurious office
    space it will never use and lying to cover up the wrongdoing.






































































     

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