Cannabis bust on Indigenous land highlights legal divide

In this photo provided by John Pettit, Charles Farden, right, stands in handcuffs as law enforcement officers with the Bureau of Indian Affairs inspect a cannabis garden at Picuris Pueblo, N.M. Bureau of Indian Affairs officers seized about nine plants at Picuris Pueblo while handcuffing registered medical marijuana patient Farden. The raid casts a cloud over plans by Picuris Pueblo tribal authorities to open a cannabis business as New Mexico legalizes sales of recreational marijuana. (John Pettit via AP)

Charles Farden stands in handcuffs as law enforcement officers with the Bureau of Indian Affairs inspect a cannabis garden Sept. 29 at Picuris Pueblo, N.M. The federal raid on a household marijuana garden on tribal land in northern New Mexico at Picuris Pueblo is sowing uncertainty and some resentment about U.S. drug enforcement priorities on Native American reservations. Bureau of Indian Affairs officers seized about nine plants at Picuris Pueblo while handcuffing registered medical marijuana patient Farden. (John Pettit via AP)

In this Sept. 29 photo provided by John Pettit, law enforcement officers with the Bureau of Indian Affairs inspect a cannabis garden at Picuris Pueblo, N.M. A federal raid on a household marijuana garden on tribal land in northern New Mexico at Picuris Pueblo is sowing uncertainty and some resentment about U.S. drug enforcement priorities on Native American reservations. The Bureau of Indian Affairs officers seized about nine plants at Picuris Pueblo while handcuffing registered medical marijuana patient Charles Farden. (John Pettit via AP)

SANTA FE, N.M. — A federal raid on a household marijuana garden on tribal land in northern New Mexico is sowing uncertainty and resentment about U.S. drug enforcement priorities on Native American reservations, as more states roll out legal marketplaces for recreational pot sales.