The credit union claims that although marijuana remains illegal under federal law, the Federal Reserve as a quasi-government institution lacks the authority to keep marijuana banks out of the nation’s financial system. Mason argued that a pot bank would serve the government’s interest in keeping better tabs on the drug money.
“They intend to take this money out of shadows and off of the street so that they can track it and trace it,” Mason argued.
But the Federal Reserve lawyer insisted the bank is too risky.
U.S. District Judge R. Brooke Jackson repeatedly said he sympathizes with the struggling pot businesses. Jackson twice called existing federal guidance on marijuana money a “nothingburger,” meaning that memos from the Treasury and Department of Justice don’t solve the federal-state conflicts caused by legalizing pot.
“We think there ought to be banking and regulation. I get that. I agree with that. But that’s not the legal question here, is it?” Jackson said.
The pot bank’s lawyer argued that national marijuana legalization is inevitable, but Jackson retorted that the pot bank should take up its problem with Congress and not the courts.
“If I were in the Congress, I’d vote for you, but I’ve got to do the job of a federal judge here,” Jackson said.
The judge repeatedly tried to encourage the sides to work something out themselves, perhaps by agreeing that Fourth Corner would serve only people who believe marijuana should be legal, not taking money from businesses that sell pot. Jackson pointed out that hundreds of banks already do take pot proceeds, even if they sometimes pretend they don’t know what they’re doing. For example, the state of Colorado uses Wells Fargo bank, meaning that tax proceeds from the sale of marijuana goes into the nation’s banking system already.
“I think there’s a certain unfairness to allowing these big banks to serve this business and keeping you out.
“But it’s not for me, I don’t think, to decide issues of fairness or policy. My job is to enforce and apply the law,” Jackson said.
The judge has no deadline to decide the case.
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