Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg warned hundreds of illegal pot joints Tuesday that he’s ready to snuff them out with eviction notices.
to rogue businesses in the borough threatening them with the boot, saying he has the power to launch evictions under civil law.
“This letter is to inform you that the Manhattan’s District Attorney’s Office is prepared to use our civil authority … to require owners and landlords to commence eviction proceedings of commercial tenants who are engaged in illegal trade or business, and to take over such eviction proceedings if necessary,” the missive warned.
“In instances where criminal charges are warranted, including but not limited to tax evasion, money laundering, or the sale of cannabis and other narcotics to minors, my office will work with our law enforcement partners to prosecute those crimes.”
Bragg said at a press conference Tuesday, “It is time for the operation of unlicensed cannabis dispensaries to end.
“They’ve been put on notice.”
Mayor Eric Adams — who was at the event on the Upper West Side, where city officials said such illegal businesses have particularly proliferated — added,“You can’t just open a shop and sell marijuana.
“There are rules,” he said. “These products are not tested. In some cases, they could be laced with fentanyl. These are dangerous products.”
Asked whether other city district attorneys would be following suit, Adams only said Big Apple officials will “share” information about Manhattan’s program and its potential success with them.
As part of the crackdown, the NYPD also filed four lawsuits Tuesday against Manhattan shops that were allegedly caught selling weed without a license by undercover cops in December. The suits are seeking to stop the shops from selling and are seeking to impose $1,000 fines per day that they broke the law.
Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine said it’s clear fines haven’t been working, noting the illegal shops are making so much money that they can afford whatever monetary damages are slapped against them.
This makes them “magnets for robberies … They have potentially tens of thousands of dollars on hand,” Levine added at the presser.
Workers at two Manhattan shops told The Post on Tuesday that sadly for them, an eviction would do the trick.
“If they did that to us, we would close. No chance [of reopening],” said Sam Ahmmed, 24, toiling out of an illegal pot shop in the West Village.
He said he’s constantly scared of authorities storming the store.
“I live waiting for them, I swear,” said Ahmmed, who asked that the name of his store not be used.
Another worker at a Village shop who asked that neither his name nor the store be ID’d said he lives in fear of the law, too.
“I’m tired of this — It’s too scary for me to be a worker,” the employee said.
“When the cops come and close the stores, anything could happen to me,” he said.
Both men griped that the process of getting a license to legally sell Mary Jane takes too long.
A female worker at an illegal marijuana shop in the Meatpacking District said her boss isn’t bothering to get a license because the process is “too expensive” and “there’s no guarantee” — while scoffing at the threat of eviction.
“Let’s see how things play out,” she said. “I got raided before.”
The move to boot illegal shops comes less than a month after local Sheriff Anthony Miranda testified during a City Council hearing that an astounding 1,400 businesses have popped up in the Big Apple illegally selling cannabis products.


