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Oklahoma’s marijuana underworld worth over $100 billion, new estimates show
News
April 24, 2025
Oklahoma’s marijuana underworld worth over $100 billion, new estimates show
By GARRETT YALCH garrett@readfrontier.com,

Oklahoma’s illicit marijuana market may now be worth hundreds of billions of dollars, according to new statistics presented Friday by the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and the Texoma High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area.

Between March 2024 and March 2025, state tracking systems failed to account for roughly 70 million pounds of marijuana — nearly 30 times the amount needed to supply Oklahoma’s roughly 300,000 licensed medical marijuana patients, said Donnie Anderson, the director of the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics. From 2022 to 2023, that figure was 22 million pounds — meaning the amount of lost marijuana has roughly tripled over the past two years.

The numbers show how, despite years of enforcement, Oklahoma’s illicit market has continued to thrive. A senior state official told The Frontier the increase likely stems from more growers complying with reporting requirements amid tighter enforcement, rather than a surge in production.

The new data comes from a report from the Texoma High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area commissioned by U.S. Sen. James Lankford, R-Oklahoma. It ties the overproduction to illegal farms run by Chinese criminal groups and cites reporting by The Frontier and ProPublica.

At a press conference Friday unveiling the report, officials called for legislative action.

“We can’t arrest our way out of this,” said Donnie Anderson, the director of the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics. “If we did raids every day for the next five years—and we are doing them about every day — we won’t end this. We’ve got to address this legislatively. We’ve got to clean this up.”

Anderson urged the legislature to commission a formal study to determine how much marijuana is needed for the state’s medical market and to develop production limits for grows based on the findings. Unlike most other states in the country, Oklahoma does not limit the amount of marijuana its farms can produce.

That position stands in contrast to what other state leaders have said. Senate President Pro Tempore Lonnie Paxton told The Frontier in February that he believes law enforcement agencies already have the tools they need to deal with the issue, and that major new legislation is unnecessary.

Lankford said during the press conference that he has been in talks with senior federal law enforcement officials under the new Trump Administration about what’s happening in Oklahoma’s marijuana industry.

“If we go back several years ago, the FBI and DEA basically told us, ‘Hey, you made your bed, lie in it,’” Lankford said. “We’re now seeing the results of people backing off on the law enforcement side as our state rushed into this issue. But now the DEA and FBI are very engaged in what’s going on.”

Oklahoma law requires all marijuana plants to be tagged. Officials say criminal operations often tag plants to appear legal, then remove the tags before diverting the product — meaning it doesn’t get tested or sold through dispensaries. Authorities estimate how much product was diverted to the black market using this data and assumptions about what percentage of the marijuana becomes sellable versus waste.

While black market prices fluctuate, they generally range from about $1,800 to $3,500 per pound, according to experts, meaning the diverted supply could be worth between roughly $126 billion and $245 billion. By comparison, Oklahoma’s oil industry generated roughly $55.6 billion in 2023, according to the Oklahoma Energy Resources Board.

The report also highlighted widespread human trafficking, environmental problems, and national security risks associated with the illegal industry. As The Frontier and ProPublica reported, thousands of immigrant workers have been abused and exploited at marijuana farms in Oklahoma. And some marijuana entrepreneurs in the state have ties to the Chinese government and illegal influence operations it has carried out in the U.S.

“We are funding transnational organizations who are funding governments that do not like the United States,” Anderson said. “That’s where the profits from those 70 million pounds of marijuana are going.”

A hoe-lot is happening at The Happy Hoe Farm Market
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A hoe-lot is happening at The Happy Hoe Farm Market
By LADONNA RHODES STAFF WRITER 
November 20, 2025
Who says you can’t be a Happy Hoe? The Checotah Chamber of Commerce just hadaribboncuttingfor The Happy Hoe Farm Market and the talk around town is there’s a hoe-lot of good things to eat or get a tre...
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Another successful Veterans Day Celebration
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Another successful Veterans Day Celebration
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Another successful Veterans Day Celebration was hosted by Checotah Public Schools and honored all who served in the military especially local veterans on Tuesday, November 11. The special day started ...
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Upcoming Holiday Events
A: Main, Community Calendar...
Upcoming Holiday Events
By 3rd Annual Feed the Community 
November 20, 2025
3rd Annual Feed the Community Tuesday, Nov. 24 Dinner served from 5 p.m. until the food runs out Checotah Community Center Everyone is welcome! By TNT Power Washing Services In Memory of their mother,...
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Motorcyclist killed
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Motorcyclist killed
November 20, 2025
A 36-year-old cyclist from McAlester was killed Friday when he lost control of his vehicle on U.S. 270 and Oil Well Road, rolled through a barbed wire fence and came to rest in a field. Zachary W. Pat...
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Ava Rose Johnson partners with businesses for Holiday Food Drive
A: Main, Community Calendar...
Ava Rose Johnson partners with businesses for Holiday Food Drive
November 20, 2025
Ava Rose Johnson is partnering with Community Counselors Group and True Value in a Holiday Food Drive that will help support families impacted by the recent government shutdown and cutbacks. “I am thr...
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Six FFA members attend National FFA Convention
A: Main, News...
Six FFA members attend National FFA Convention
By Staff Reports 
November 20, 2025
Six Checotah FFA members and their agricultural teacher/advisors Mr. Rusty Stonebarger and Mr. Zachary Ilbery had the opportunity to attend the National FFA Convention in Indianapolis, Indiana last mo...
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Editor Picks
OICA Kid Governor®, 4-H Junior Governor inspire future leaders, elevate importance of voting
commentary
OICA Kid Governor®, 4-H Junior Governor inspire future leaders, elevate importance of voting
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OKLAHOMA CITY – The work done by the Oklahoma Institute for Child Advocacy (OICA), while always rewarding, can sometimes be stressful, and occasionally downright depressing. The statistics and real- w...
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News
AREA FOOD DRIVES
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MUSKOGEE - The United States Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Oklahoma announced that Jason Duane Henrichs, age 47, of Checotah, Oklahoma, entered a guilty plea to an Information of one c...
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