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Checkpoint, Dutch Cannabis Cafe, Fined $13 Million For Stocking Too Much Weed

Cannabis Cafe

MIKE CORDER   03/25/10 02:44 PM ET   AP

THE HAGUE, Netherlands — Even in this freewheeling land of tolerated soft drugs, the Checkpoint marijuana bar went too far. A Dutch judge fined it euro10 million ($13.34 million) on Thursday for overstepping the rarely enforced limit on how much weed can be held in stock, in what as seen as a test case in a growing effort to rein in drug tourism.

At the height of its popularity, the euphemistically called "coffee shop" in the southern town of Terneuzen close to the Belgian border sold drugs to 3,000 people a day – many of them crossing specifically to buy marijuana and hashish.

In a sign of its acceptance by local authorities, the town even put up road signs pointing the way to the Checkpoint and built a parking lot nearby to reduce the traffic congestion in town.

The building on the banks of the Westerschelde River also housed a regular cafe and restaurant.

The Checkpoint, which has now closed, became a symbol for how the long-standing Dutch tolerance of small-scale sales of marijuana at neighborhood cafes spawned a multimillion euro (dollar) industry.

Dutch regulations allow coffee shops to hold just 500 grams (18 ounces) of cannabis on the premises. But when police raided the Checkpoint on two occasions they found 200 kilograms (440 pounds).

Those amounts of drugs turned the coffee shop into a criminal organization, judges ruled.

Soft drugs are technically illegal but tolerated, in a long-standing policy that allows authorities to carefully regulate the supply. It also allows law enforcers to keep them separate from hard drugs – whose sale on any scale remains a punishable offense.

Terneuzen's mayor, Jan Lonink, said the verdict "underscores the importance of tightening the tolerance policy and administering it better."

Terneuzen is not the only municipality grappling with such drug superstores, raising the ire of local residents who complain of problems caused by drug buyers.

Neighboring countries also object that the coffee shops undermine their own efforts to halt the drug trade.

Prosecutors in cities along the Dutch borders with Belgium, France and Germany are experiencing similar problems and were expected to carefully study Thursday's verdict to see if it provides a blueprint for cracking down on their own coffee shops.

The Checkpoint's owner, identified only as Meddy W. in line with Dutch privacy rules, and 15 of his staff were convicted by Middelburg District Court. The owner was sentenced to 16 weeks imprisonment but was released as he already spent the time in pretrial custody.

The fine was lower than the more than euro28 million ($37 million) prosecutors had sought. The staff were sentenced to community service.

The court said in its written verdict that the sentences were low because prosecutors, police and local authorities in Terneuzen had allowed Checkpoint to grow unchecked. It was such an accepted part of the local community that one staff member was given a mortgage after he produced a Checkpoint pay slip as proof of his income. It also was on the books of an employment agency that advised jobless people to apply for work there.

"Checkpoint didn't just present itself as a legal business, it also had that status in society," the judges wrote. Staff "were proud of their work and thought Checkpoint could be a model for how a good coffee shop should work."

Justice Ministry spokesman Wim van der Weegen declined comment on the specific case, but said the government had pledged last year to scale down the size of coffee shops. However, the Netherlands faces new elections in June, and the next government will have to deal with the issue.

Lonink said politicians should study the Checkpoint case as they consider revamping the tolerance policy. "There need to be more opportunities to rein in the size of a shop," he said.

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THE HAGUE, Netherlands — Even in this freewheeling land of tolerated soft drugs, the Checkpoint marijuana bar went too far. A Dutch judge fined it euro10 million ($13.34 million) on Thursday for...
THE HAGUE, Netherlands — Even in this freewheeling land of tolerated soft drugs, the Checkpoint marijuana bar went too far. A Dutch judge fined it euro10 million ($13.34 million) on Thursday for...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
turboturd
I need help! And a pony!
12:40 AM on 03/29/2010
The residents and law enforcement accepted this place as a regular business. They knew for a fact all that time they had to be keeping more in stock than was allowed because of the amount of business they were doing. If the Pot shop is to blame so is the law enforcement for knowing all that time. Sentencing these people who owned and worked there is just cruel and unusual punishment.

There is no justice in this what so ever. The court who handed them convictions are just evil.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kelly Cloud
12:06 PM on 03/28/2010
to much inventory? HUH? bogus lawsuite
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chuck prebys
01:27 AM on 03/28/2010
How do we expect sane, rational citizens to have "respect for the law" as long as such an innocuous organic substance is classified a schedule 1 controlled substance?

It isn't crack.
It isn't crank.
It isn't heroin.
It isn't MDMA.
It isn't LSD.
It's not an Entheogen (which have their place in life as well).
It isn't even coke.

You DO know why it's illegal don't you?
Not for the societal effects they claim it will have, rather, for the eye opening consciousness shift people who toke usually experience.

No government "of, for and by" the people can allow this to happen.

Absolute insanity.
04:18 PM on 03/28/2010
Actually, it's illegal because William Randolph Hearst was afraid that hemp would supplant his paper as the material of choice when it came to making newspapers.

Hearst had a monopoly on the paper industry; both the making of paper & the selling of newspapers. He was afraid hemp, which can be printed on just like normal paper and is sustainable because it regrows every year, would become the material of choice when it came to make newspapers. So he hatched a plan to equate marijuana with hemp and got hemp banned & marijuana criminalized.

THAT'S why it's illegal.
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CigarGod
What is your process?
07:17 PM on 03/28/2010
The Mormon's were the first to outlaw it.
Their converts from Mexico brought it to Utah.
Turns out they used it as an aid in their previous religion and were incorporating it into their new one...and making converts of their own.

At the time, it was not illegal anywhere in this country.
Blame the Mormon's.
10:56 PM on 03/26/2010
If you want a good example of how the US media can't get anything right, check out anything written in the NY Times about California's marijuana legalization initiative. They'll cite responsible, accurate points of view from supporters, and then give equal space to crazy, ridiculous nonsense from opponents, with no discernment made. I like the fact that the US is different from Europe--much of Europe is entirely too regulated and regimented--but I am sick to death of the US media giving space to the legions of juvenile US citizens who make crazy stuff up out of thin air just to get attention, like two year olds. These sorts of folks are evidence that something has gone very wrong in our society--some deep-seated loneliness or alienation that makes far too many people act out in very infantile ways.
10:22 AM on 03/27/2010
"These sorts of folks are evidence that something has gone very wrong in our society--some deep-seated loneliness or alienation that makes far too many people act out in very infantile ways"

gosh, what and who are you talking about?
09:37 PM on 03/26/2010
Legalize it, tax it, and if the rules are broken fine them. Makes more sense than prison sentences which sometimes are longer for pot then rape and murder no?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chuck prebys
01:29 AM on 03/28/2010
Almost correct.

DON'T tax it.

Already too d@mned many taxes.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Freenation
08:31 PM on 03/26/2010
What was this town exactly groupies paradise
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Dosadi
Political agnostic
07:52 PM on 03/26/2010
They should have called. I could have helped.
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04:16 PM on 03/26/2010
The authorities are intent on closing down the market.
If this "cafe" had ounces or tons presented no danger or threat to life or limb of anyone.
Ridiculous laws protecting no one against practices which cause harm to no one. The world still can't seem to get enough of them.
01:26 PM on 03/26/2010
Cannabis must legalized worldwide, or wherever it is illegal it will be illegally trafficked.

There is no safer medicine on the planet. Humans have used it safely for thousands and thousands of years, in fact, have co-evolved with it.

It is immoral and unconstitutional to make plants illegal for humans to use. Plants are our birthright, and can provide most of the medicine we need.

The 'danger' of using cannabis is that it expands awareness, leading to the realization that our system is corrupted, and turning into a full-on police state.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chuck prebys
01:33 AM on 03/28/2010
You can thank the Rockefeller clan, the AMA and the western method of Aleopathic medicine for making medicinal plants illegal.

If fertilizer, water and sunlight are forced to compete with for-profit pharma research labs and their patenting process then the organic doesn't have a chance in the current world.

I reckon it will take the human race another thousand years to rediscover the exotic botanical blends of the apothecaries of old.

The only solution is to do what Americans do best: Be a bad boy and break the laws that make absolutely no sense to you.

What's more invigorating than that?
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12:32 PM on 03/26/2010
THERE IS NEVER TOO MUCH WEED.
PERIOD
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fumes
Pass The Pakalolo
06:56 PM on 03/27/2010
best!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chuck prebys
01:34 AM on 03/28/2010
"Craig, you done smoked yourself stupid!!"

Haaaaaaaaaaaa
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12:21 PM on 03/26/2010
we need to end prohibition of this harmless plant
and
stop criminalizing non-violent behavior of ADULTS

the war on drugs is a cruel war on peaceful people
12:55 PM on 03/26/2010
well said techcafe . . . totally agree
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b1rd67
Secular Humanist for Reason, Ethics and Justice.
04:21 PM on 03/26/2010
It is also a waste of billions upon billions of dollars that could be better spent on education, health care and other domestic programs to improve the lives of citizens!
11:57 AM on 03/26/2010
This is the way it should be. The law is allowing these places to exist and people to enjoy. They set minimal rules and standards, if you cannot abide by those then you deserve to suffer the consequences.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Valentine
Retired SEIU Member
12:54 PM on 03/26/2010
A limit of 18 oz. for up to three thousand customers a day is a little .... stupid don't you think?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Stretchumall
"With Liberty and Justice for All"
01:24 PM on 03/26/2010
"On Premisis" That means they can store it off premisis and bring it in as needed just as they do with fireworks in the U.S. .
01:28 PM on 03/26/2010
You mean like the bankers are suffering for bringing down the US economy?
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02:54 PM on 03/26/2010
Please, everybody knows the potheads are responsible for the global warming and the financial crisis.
Growing plants is just gross, and smoking the flowers completely insane.

They should be sent to camps where they would be reeducated through booze and prozac until they get the subprime loan they deserve.
11:36 AM on 03/26/2010
duh this seems unfair
11:32 AM on 03/26/2010
Max. allowable 18 oz. ...caught with 440 pounds..........they must have been using a Wall St. accountant to keep track.
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12:36 PM on 03/26/2010
Sure.
439 pounds where off balance sheet...
And Deloitte approved it for me.
I still don't get what's wrog with it.
Giopaps
Born Dutch, always Dutch
01:17 PM on 03/26/2010
Our neighbors complained and called the police.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chuck prebys
01:36 AM on 03/28/2010
Arthur Anderson......Big Dicks accountant firm of choice.