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News / Northwest

Two plead guilty in pot dispensary case

Seattle men admit facilities were front for illegal drug ring

The Columbian
Published: August 20, 2012, 5:00pm

SEATTLE — Two people charged as part of the biggest crackdown on marijuana dispensaries in Washington state pleaded guilty to federal charges Monday, acknowledging their business was a front for an illicit drug distribution and money-laundering scheme.

Seattle residents Craig Dieffenbach and Jingjing Mo entered the pleas in U.S. District Court in Seattle. They face potential five-year mandatory minimum sentences but could receive significantly less time if they cooperate with investigators.

The pair ran two dispensaries under the name Seattle Cannabis Cooperative, which were among about 20 dispensaries raided by state and federal authorities last November. Authorities said the shops purported to be serving medical marijuana patients but were fronts for illicit drug sales.

At one point, Mo, with Dieffenbach’s knowledge, sold a pound of marijuana to a customer who turned out to be a DEA informant, they admitted in court. Mo also offered to sell 25 pounds for distribution in the Midwest — and suggested the informant buy lousy weed, under the theory that drug users there wouldn’t know the difference.

Dieffenbach had previously run into legal trouble of a different sort. He filed for bankruptcy protection after being sued for marketing vodka under the name of legendary guitarist Jimi Hendrix and agreeing to settle the case for $3.2 million. He declined to comment after the hearing Monday but asked a reporter not to write a story about the plea agreements because, he said, he could lose his job working for a Realtor.

Prosecutors are seeking to have about $25,000, a pistol and two rifles seized in the case forfeited to the federal government.

A defendant in another of the raids, Brionne Keith Corbray, pleaded guilty Monday afternoon to a count of conspiracy to distribute marijuana. Corbray, who ran a three-dispensary outfit called The GAME Collective, admitted selling marijuana for a profit.

“These cases are proof that the defendants had very little to do with helping sick people and a lot to do with helping themselves,” U.S. Attorney Jenny Durkan said. “We’re not going to prosecute sick people or their actual caregivers, but we’re not going to let common drug dealers charade as something they’re not.”

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