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Governors from 4 marijuana states ask to be left alone

Washington state Gov. Jay Inslee talks to reporters, March 6, 2017, at the Capitol in Olympia. Inslee on Monday joined the governors of Alaska, Colorado and Oregon in asking the Trump administration to let pot experiments continue.
Washington state Gov. Jay Inslee talks to reporters, March 6, 2017, at the Capitol in Olympia. Inslee on Monday joined the governors of Alaska, Colorado and Oregon in asking the Trump administration to let pot experiments continue. AP

Governors from the first four states to legalize recreational marijuana are asking the Trump administration to let the pot experiments continue.

The governors of Alaska, Colorado, Oregon and Washington say that marijuana legalization has expanded their economies.

The governors also say in Monday's letter that legal weed can be regulated to protect public safety and that legalization reduces "inequitable incarceration," or people of color being disproportionately jailed for minor pot crimes.

The letter was addressed to Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin. The governors say they opposed legalization at first, but warn that a federal pot crackdown now "would divert existing marijuana product into the black market."

The governors also ask for the Treasury Department not to change instructions to banks for handling marijuana money.

This story was originally published April 3, 2017 at 2:07 PM with the headline "Governors from 4 marijuana states ask to be left alone."

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