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“This is an historic moment,” Jacob Elliott, 31, a defence contractor from Leesburg, Virginia, near Washington, DC, said in line outside the 3D Cannabis Center in Denver. “I never thought it would happen.”
The highly-anticipated New Year’s Day opening launched an unprecedented commercial cannabis market that Colorado officials expect will ultimately gross $ 578 million in annual revenues, including $ 67 million in tax receipts for the state.
Possession, cultivation and private personal consumption of marijuana by adults for the sake of just getting high has already been legal in Colorado for more than a year under a state constitutional amendment approved by voters.
As of Wednesday, however, cannabis was being legally produced, sold and taxed in a system modelled after a regime many states have in place for alcohol sales - but which exists for marijuana nowhere in the world outside of Colorado.
Even in the Netherlands, where some coffee shops and nightclubs are widely known to sell cannabis products with the informal consent of authorities, back-end distribution of the drug to those businesses remains illegal.
Customer No. 1 at Botana Care in the Denver suburb of Northglenn was Jesse Phillips, 32, an assembly-line worker who had camped outside the shop since 1 a.m.
“I wanted to be one of the first to buy pot and no longer be prosecuted for it. This end of prohibition is long overdue,” Phillips said.
A cheer from about 100 fellow customers as Phillips made his purchase, an eighth-ounce sampler pack containing four strains of weed - labelled with names such as “King Tut Kush” and “Gypsy Girl” - that sold for $ 45 including tax.
He also bought a child-proof carry pouch required by state regulations to transport his purchase out of the store.