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SEATTLE — Fifteen unlicensed medical marijuana shops in unincorporated King County are on notice that they are violating the law.

Prosecuting Attorney Dan Satterberg said Wednesday that they are cracking down on these stores after Washington lawmakers amended Initiative 502 to require licenses for all pot shops.

brought medical marijuana into the state licensing and tax scheme, he said. The stores were notified by mail this week, and if they continue to operate as unlicensed retail outlets for the black market, they’ll face civil and criminal ramifications, Satterberg said.

Washington voters adopted Initiative 502 in 2012, which required the state to create a system for the licensed production, processing and sale of marijuana. to bring medical marijuana into the system and eliminate “collective gardens,” he said.

That means only licensed operations can sell pot, he said.

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“Itap not fair for those stores that are doing it right and having to compete with the unlicensed stores that don’t have to pay the 37 percent tax,” Satterberg said. There was one licensed store in the White Center neighborhood where Satterberg held the news conference with Sheriff John Urquhart, and it must compete with a handful unlicensed medical marijuana stores, he said.

“The state has set forth the rules,” he said, and if they don’t have a license through the state Liquor and Cannabis Board, “they must immediately close down.”

The 15 stores that received notices include seven in the White Center neighborhood, two in Skyway and six in East County. Messages left at Northwest Cannabis Market in Seattle and Military Road Holistic in Auburn were not immediately returned. There was no answer at Pacific Coast Natural Medicine in Seattle or The Solution Renton.

“They are taking tax money from the state and operating in locations that would never be approved by the LCB,” he said. “They are a blight on the neighborhoods they inhabit.”

Satterberg said the federal government is watching how Washington regulates the marijuana industry, and the success of the law depends on how well local jurisdictions deal with the unlicensed retail stores.

In addition to sending notifications to the 15 stores, they’ve notified their landlords that there is an illegal business operating on the property, he said. This means that if the stores continue to operate illegally, the Liquor and Cannabis Board can go in and seize all of their product.

If the civil options don’t work, they’ll consider criminal remedies, he said.

“We’re not going in heavy handed on this,” he said. “We’re telling them the new scheme has to be followed. The days of the Wild West are over.”

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Follow Martha Bellisle on Twitter: @marthabellisle

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