In late 2011, Attorney General Eric Holder  authorized raids against marijuana dispensaries in California, where  medicinal marijuana is legal, in an effort to create a distraction from  the congressional investigation into Operation Fast and Furious, a new  book set for release Tuesday claims.
“Eric Holder, Obama’s embattled Attorney General, was under mounting  pressure from Congress to explain the botched Fast and Furious sting  operation, whereby two thousand assault rifles and other firearms were  sold to suspected traffickers for the Mexican drug cartels,” Martin A.  Lee writes in “Smoke Signals: A Social History of Marijuana – Medical, Recreational and Scientific.”
“It was intended as an intelligence-gathering ploy, but U.S. agents lost track of most of these weapons.”
“On October 7, the same day Holder wrote a detailed letter to Rep.  Issa, defending his handling of the Fast and Furious affair, four  federal prosecutors in California held a hastily organized press  conference in which they threw down the gauntlet and announced the start  of a far-ranging crackdown that would nearly decimate the Golden  State’s medical marijuana industry.”
“Within ten months, close to half of California’s 1400 dispensaries  would shut down as the DEA waged an all-out vendetta against what  Proposition 215 had unloosed,” Lee continued.
“The drug police weren’t just going after the bad apples; they were  going after every apple in the barrel. Cannabis dispensaries abiding by  state law were raided by federal agents. Federal prosecutors threatened  to seize property from landlords who rented to medical marijuana  facilities. The feds also threatened municipal officials who sought to  implement state medical marijuana regulations. Federally insured banks  and credit card companies refused to service marijuana-related  enterprises.”
Lee questions how Obama — the “Choom Gang kid” who smoked marijuana  with his friends in Hawaii as a teenager — could “unleash the dogs of  the drug war against a thriving business sector when times were tough  economically and jobs were scarce?”
“Team Obama’s decision to crack down on the medical marijuana  industry wasn’t motivated by public health concerns,” Lee writes,  answering his own question. “The Justice Department green-lit a scorched  earth campaign against medicinal cannabis in order to placate law  enforcement and control the damage from the Fast and Furious scandal by  deflecting attention to other matters.”
In an excerpt  obtained and published by the left-wing news and opinion website  TruthOut.org, Lee describes the Fast and Furious scandal — including how  it led to the murder of Border Patrol agent Brian Terry — and how  Holder “stonewalled” Congress for months, “disavowing any knowledge of  the caper despite documentation showing that high-level Justice  Department officials aided the surveillance mission.”
“The fact that Fast and Furious had its roots in a similar Bush-era  ATF operation mattered little to GOP Rep. Darrell Issa, the  grandstanding chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and  Government Reform, who went so far as to accuse the Obama administration  of purposely allowing the guns to escape as part of a liberal plot to  impose new gun control laws,” Lee writes. “Issa was not credible; nor  was Holder.”
Lee goes on to explain that when calls for special investigations  into Fast and Furious and for Holder’s resignation intensified in  October 2011, Holder played what Lee calls the “ace up his sleeve.”
“Ever since California voters approved Proposition 215, which  legalized marijuana for medical use in 1996, law enforcement lobbyists  had been urging the federal government to enforce prohibition and choke  off the burgeoning industry,” Lee writes.
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