King County Council - Council Meeting
(May 17, 2022) - Cannabis Business Security Task Force

King County - Cannabis Business Security Task Force

With continued advocacy from Washington CannaBusiness Association members, the council approved a motion to create a cannabis business security task force in King County.

Here are some observations from the Tuesday May 17th Metropolitan King County Council Meeting.

My top 3 takeaways:

  • Several representatives of the cannabis sector offered public remarks in support of the proposal’s potential impact on the safety of their businesses similar to what they’d expressed at the motion’s prior committee meeting.
    • Jamie Hoffman, Craft Elixirs Owner and Founder (audio - 3m, video)
      • Grateful to Dunn and the council for their “attention to this issue,” Hoffman laid out how her two processing facilities in Seattle were threatened by the “dramatic increase in cannabis business robberies” even as her business was in a “quiet neighborhood of Wallingford.” Claiming that police hadn’t responded to her reports of vandalism and robberies, she asserted that the incidents cost her “upwards of $50,000 in stolen goods and damage to our processing facility.” Thus far, crimes had occurred at night, but Hoffman remained worried that her employees would be “held up at gunpoint” and traumatized or hurt. She had hired overnight security, but couldn’t afford to keep them present full time and would reluctantly close her business if nothing improved. Supportive of a task force, Hoffman summed up the attitude of the cannabis sector as feeling “picked on and violated.”
    • Shannon Vetto, Evergreen Market CEO and Washington CannaBusiness Association (WACA) Trustee (audio - 2m, video
      • With five stores in the area, Vetto acknowledged that "cash is definitely the appeal" for would-be thieves, but also found the “intensity” in violence and duration of the robberies was increasing. She explained that a robbery was attempted at one of their locations on February 9th by individuals accused in a spree of violent robberies, including the death of budtender Jordan Brown during a robbery in Tacoma on March 19th. Vetto believed a task force could do much to improve the situation through ensuring there were “prevention opportunities” as well as “detection and prosecution” of those committing the offenses.
    • Vicki Christophersen, WACA Executive Director and Lobbyist (audio - 2m, video)
      • Christophersen brought up how robberies had occurred at "both retail establishments and producer/processor establishments” and her members were urging her to “speak out in every opportunity that we have.” While mindful that there was "no one silver bullet" that would “solve” a complicated matter like armed robbery, she felt “this task force really has the opportunity to create the level of coordination and strategic thinking” necessary to shift the dynamic. Christophersen complimented Dunn and motion co-sponsor Councilmember Jeanne Kohl-Welles for "their leadership" on the matter.

Information Set