Killing At Colorado Dispensary Raises Security Fears

Killing At Colorado Dispensary Raises Security Fears

Cameras are everywhere in a dispensary, from the parking lot to the front door to the warehouses where the plant is packaged.

But the elaborate security requirements in states that allow medical or recreational pot stores have one thing in common: They were written to keep marijuana off the black market, not to protect the people handling it.

A fatal attack on a security guard at a suburban Denver dispensary last week has the industry wondering whether state security requirements are enough. Some industry analysts have compared a marijuana shop to a jewelry store full of untraceable diamonds, often uninsured and protected by people making not much more than minimum wage.

It's a recipe for danger.

Former Marine Travis Mason, 24, was shot and killed last weekend in Aurora at the Green Heart dispensary he was hired to guard. Police haven't made any arrests in the killing, which they say was perpetrated by two armed men.

The slaying was the first known on-the-job death at a licensed marijuana business in Colorado. It highlighted how little is known about how safe marijuana shops are.

Cannabis businesses don't publicize robberies

It's unclear whether dispensaries or marijuana-growing operations are more likely to be robbed than any other place of business. Crime records aren't compiled by type of business, and the marijuana industry is hesitant to publicize crimes.

No state with legal cannabis businesses keeps a count of how often they or their employees are robbed.

"You're just as likely to get an armed robbery at a bank or a convenience store or anywhere else where there is cash," said Michael Jerome, spokesman for Blue Line Protection Group, a security firm that serves marijuana businesses in several states, including Colorado.

"But in this industry, there is a natural tendency to resist uniformed security that looks like a police officer. And when they're robbed, they keep quiet about it to avoid becoming targets."

The security requirements in states with regulated pot shops look fairly similar. Businesses have to film entries and exits, with cameras good enough to identify people.

"They're really just to watch plants and keep people from selling to 12-year-olds. They don't provide real security," Noah Stakes, CEO of CannaGuard, a Portland, Oregon, company that has installed security systems in more than 250 marijuana businesses in several states.

Colorado's Department of Public Safety tried earlier this year to count crimes at marijuana businesses. They found it impossible. But they did note that in the Denver, which has tried to count crimes related to marijuana businesses, found no uptick in robberies near pot shops.

"There has been concern that...robbery would be prevalent, but this has not proven to be the case" in Denver, authors noted.

Being cash-only businesses makes dispensaries vulnerable

Still, the Aurora shooting has people who work with cannabis anxious. The industry has ...

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