A guide to Jersey’s new cannabis investment rules

Written by: Ogier Posted: 03/09/2021

Ogier katie-baxterMany local financial services businesses will have experienced increased enquiries from clients wishing to move away from traditional investments and investment strategies, and looking instead to invest directly and indirectly in the lucrative recreational and medicinal cannabis sectors. Ogier’s Katie Baxter explores the rules

The government of Jersey recently legalised the on-island growing of cannabis for medicinal purposes, and the island is positioning itself as a central player in this field, which was valued at £5.64bn in 2020. 

However, growing and supplying cannabis for recreational use remains very much illegal as a matter of Jersey law.

The cannabis sector is a ‘growing’ market – so far, 36 US states and the district of Colombia have approved the medicinal use of marijuana and 15 of those have also approved its recreational use. 

The start-ups looking to produce new cannabis technologies are readily available investments, including cultivation management and distribution – home delivery apps for cannabis orders proved to be particularly lucrative and in demand during the pandemic. 

There is even a stock exchange dedicated to monitoring the value of medicinal and legal marijuana. The Global Cannabis Stock Index, which was established in 2013, tracks the overall publicly traded market value for these sectors. 

CBD cannabis is being utilised in numerous industries. One example is healthcare and wellbeing, ranging from healing products to face creams.

For financial services businesses in Jersey, the difficulty had always been that Jersey applied a ‘single criminality test’ – if the conduct undertaken in another jurisdiction was unlawful in Jersey, it was deemed to be criminal conduct, even if it was perfectly lawful in the original jurisdiction. 

Article 1(2A) of the Proceeds of Crime Law states: “A person benefits from any criminal conduct if that person obtains property as a result of or in connection with the conduct, and a person benefits from criminal conduct if the person receives any payment or other reward in connection with such conduct, whether carried out by that person or another.”

Prior to this year, any involvement with the overseas cannabis sector – regardless of it being perfectly legal in that jurisdiction – that resulted in proceeds derived from such involvement were treated as proceeds of crime, such that Suspicious Activity Reporting requirements would be triggered and filed with the States of Jersey Police. 

This may have resulted in assets being frozen in Jersey, and fund services businesses finding themselves in the unenviable position of being unable to process those proceeds and divest themselves of the asset – which could cause significant operating issues for them.

BL74_Ogieradv_illoJersey law change

However, on 30 June this year, the Government of Jersey passed amendments to the Proceeds of Crime (Jersey) Law 1999 to amend the current definition of criminal conduct, facilitating investment and structuring in the cannabis sector.

The new regulations clarify which investments should not be treated as proceeds of crime by FSBs.

It also amended the definition of ‘criminal conduct’ under the law to provide that the production, supply, use, export or import of cannabis or any of its derivatives are no longer considered criminal conduct – provided that it is lawful where and when it occurs, and it occurs in a jurisdiction outside Jersey that the Minister for External Relations and Financial Services may specify by order.

The order as to which jurisdiction will be an ‘approved jurisdiction’ will be those countries which apply equivalent money laundering controls to Jersey and reflect FATF (Financial Action Task Force) standards – the international standards concerning money laundering, terrorist financing and financing of proliferation. 

In addition, it is anticipated that there will be guidance to sit alongside the law to deal with the position of directors and other officers involved with cannabis-related companies. 

However, regulations do not provide blanket approval. As such, when considering whether their investment complies with the regulations, financial services businesses will be required to conduct a two-stage due diligence test. 

They will need to ensure that the cannabis-related activities that generated the proceeds were lawful in the place where and when they took place, the jurisdiction is on the approved list and there are no unspecified jurisdictions involved in the supply chain (production, distribution and so on).

Once the financial services business has established that the tests are met, the cannabis proceeds will no longer be the proceeds of crime under Jersey law. 

This rule will apply even if the proceeds were generated prior to the regulations coming into force.

Proceeds that are generated from conduct which is not lawful where and when it occurred do not benefit from the exemption of criminal conduct and remain proceeds of crime under the law. 

If the jurisdiction does not feature on the approved list, then even if the proceeds are legal in that particular jurisdiction, they would also remain proceeds of crime. So, investors, beware. 

Find out more

Katie Baxter is a Senior Associate at Ogier who specialises in non-contentious trust and fiduciary law and assists a wide range of professional trustees, family offices and private clients. 

For more information on this topic, please contact Ogier’s Private Wealth or Investment Funds teams at ogier.com

• This advertising feature was first published in the 2021 Funds Edition of Businesslife magazine

 


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