EDIPURE: Colorados two largest recalls of pot-infused edibles involve nearly 30,000 packages of EdiPure, Gaias Garden products

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  1. http://www.thecannabist.co/2015/11/03/edipure-gaias-garden-pesticides-marijuana-edibles-denver/43247/




    By Ricardo Baca and David Migoya, The Denver Post
    Nearly 30,000 packages of marijuana-infused edibles in Colorado were
    voluntarily recalled in the last few days because they contain
    potentially dangerous pesticides that are banned for use on cannabis.

    The moves represent the two largest recalls of infused pot products
    to date, according to the Denver Department of Environmental Health.

    Coverage of marijuana pesticides in Colorado pot

    Regulation delays, frustrations: Faced with lack of guidance from EPA, Colorado regulators yielded to pot industry pressure over pesticide use

    Consumers file lawsuit: Colorado's largest marijuana grower sued over pesticides

    Independent spot-check: Denver Post tests find pesticides in pot products

    Recalls: Denver issues two more recalls, for products from Den-Rec: Denver Recreational Dispensary and Sacred Seed

    Following up:
    Colorado Department of Agriculture has investigations underway on
    pesticide misuse by Denver marijuana businesses Mahatma Concentrates and
    Treatments Unlimited

    An alert to consumers and shops: Denver recalls Mahatma pot extracts Gaia's Garden recalled more than 8,000 packages of infused edibles on
    Tuesday. EdiPure owner Green Cross recalled more than 20,000 units of
    its popular edibles line on Oct. 30. Both companies - which purchase
    cannabis from other growers to infuse their edibles with THC - had
    bought marijuana trim from TruCannabis, which was the subject of its own pesticide-related voluntary recall in mid-October.

    “There's a lot of sadness that we're involved in this in any way
    whatsoever,” Gaia's Garden managing owner Eric White said Tuesday.

    Gaia's Garden bought its tainted product from TruCannabis in
    February, White said. Green Cross CEO Mark Smith said his company made
    its purchase in April.

    “You have no idea when you're buying and bringing product into your
    facility,” Smith said. “At that time in April, there was no requirement
    or notice that this had pesticides. Only after the fact did they find
    out.”

    Both companies said they're altering their internal intake procedures to attempt to prevent this from happening again.

    All of these recalls were carried out by the Denver Department of
    Environmental Health, which first started cracking down on pesticide use
    in March when it placed more than 100,000 cannabis plants on hold.

    Six months after the original quarantines, The Denver Post
    commissioned independent tests on multiple marijuana extract brands and
    found that three prominent, and banned, pesticide chemicals were still being sold to customers by concentrates company Mahatma - and most of the city's marijuana recalls have come as a result.

    The Gaia's Garden recall affects
    15 medical products and six recreational products, mixed fruit lozenges
    and ginger drops included, that were distributed to 176 pot shops
    around the state.

    The Green Cross recall involves 16 EdiPure products, grape licorice and sour gummy bears included, in more than 40 stores throughout the state.

    Batch numbers for the recalls are listed in separate news releases for each company on the department's website.

    Customers who have any of the listed products should dispose of them
    or return them to the point of purchase - and contact the companies.


    While no pesticide-related illnesses have yet been reported by cannabis users to local poison control centers, two people have sued LivWell, the state's largest pot grower, for allegedly using banned pesticides on marijuana the customers later purchased.

    State law requires labels to reflect any pesticide or contaminant
    that was used at any stage of a marijuana product's processing. Though
    the law also requires cannabis businesses to test for pesticides, that
    provision has not been enforced in the first 20 months of recreational
    sales.

    The Colorado Department of Agriculture has said it is creating a new rule governing pesticide use on marijuana,
    one more restrictive than the current list. The rule, if approved, also
    would allow pesticide manufacturers to test their product on marijuana
    and apply for a special exemption if they can prove the product is safe
    for ingestion, by eating and smoking.

    Ricardo Baca: 303-954-1394, rbaca@denverpost.com or @bruvs.



    This story was first published on DenverPost.com
     

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