Only under legalization does a marijuana seller have a incentive to restrict sales to adults only. Minors have been reporting since well before any state legalized that they could get marijuana almost as easily as beer or cigarettes, despite the latter drugs being far more prevalent among adults.
And in the whiskey business, if you ran an illegal still before distilling was legal in your state, you wouldn’t be able to obtain the license to run a legit one later.
If one is convicted, sure; was Baker convited?
>>Minors have been reporting since well before any state legalized that they could get marijuana almost as easily as beer or cigarettes
Of course it is easy for a minor to get smokes when he grows his own pot. Probably a bit more work to grow his own tobacco cigars or cigarettes or set up his own home brew opertation without his parents catching on.
You don’t have to be convicted to be denied such a license.
There are whiskey distillers who were in possession of stills with which they experimented before legalization. When they stepped forward to secure the paperwork they faced hassles.
Baker himself admits he was growing pot since age 13.