Marijuana Banking: Judge Dismisses Credit Union Lawsuit Against Federal Reserve

Warning message

The subscription service is currently unavailable. Please try again later.

A district judge dismissed a lawsuit filed by a credit union against the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City that sought to provide banking services to the legal marijuana industry. The judge denied Fourth Corner Credit Union access to the country’s financial system saying that cannabis still remained illegal under federal law.

The credit union, authorized by Colorado in 2014, does not have permission to take deposits or issue credit, forcing most marijuana businesses to operate on a cash-only basis, raising robbery concerns. Colorado legalized recreational marijuana in 2012.

The Federal Reserve’s lawyers had reportedly said that allowing marijuana businesses access to the nation's banking system would be too dangerous. They added that despite the Treasury’s regulation on cannabis banking, marijuana money should not be allowed into the nation's banking system as long as pot was illegal under the federal law.

U.S. District Judge R. Brooke Jackson said Tuesday that...

Rate this article: 

This marijuana news is brought to you by 420 Intel. For the latest breaking cannabis industry news, subscribe to the 420 Intel newsletter. If you'd like to promote your product or service in this area after every article, contact us.