Girl Scout reportedly sells 300 boxes of cookies outside of California pot shop

Show Caption Hide Caption Girl Scout reportedly sells $300 of cookies outside of California pot shop The girl sold more than 300 boxes over about six hours, outside of a California pot shop, according to her father.

Corrections & Clarifications: An earlier version of this story misstated the amount of cookies reportedly sold, which was 300-plus boxes.

The Girl Scout's identity remains a mystery: Her eyes covered by Samoa-shaped glasses, she stands in the photo holding armfuls of cookies outside Urbn Leaf, a San Diego marijuana dispensary.

"Get some Girl Scout Cookies with your GSC today until 4pm!" reads the Instagram caption posted by Urbn Leaf over the weekend referencing GSC, a strain of cannabis inspired by the all-American treats.

The girl sold more than 300 boxes over about six hours, local ABC affiliate 10News reported, citing her father. The national organization's regional council describes it as a hazy sales tactic but could not determined the girl's identity.

“She was walking along the sidewalk when we saw her outside with her wagon," Savanna Rakofsky, marketing director for Urbn Leaf, told USA TODAY. "That’s when we asked if we could get a picture to help promote her being out there.”

The marijuana dispensary “is not on the approved booth site list," as Maryl Doyle, a Girl Scouts San Diego spokeswoman, told the San Diego Union Tribune, but scouts are allowed to tout cookies in a wagon on "walk-about" sales.

A video of the girl making sales, posted by 10News' Travis Rice, appears to show the girl standing — her face blurred — with a wagon on a parking lot median in view of the dispensary's door.

STORY: Girl Scout sells hundreds of boxes of cookies outside San Diego marijuana dispensary in just a few hours @10news https://t.co/Y00LkFT3Zk pic.twitter.com/WPuxVQJZYE — Travis Rice (@10NewsTravis) February 3, 2018

"So if that's what they say they were doing... then they were right within the rules," Girl Scouts San Diego's Alison Bushan told the news station.

The Girl Scouts national organization put out a statement in 2014 after a girl sold 117 boxes in two hours outside a San Francisco dispensary, clarifying that local councils set all policies on how their cookie programs are run.

Doyle, the Girl Scouts San Diego spokeswoman, told the Union Tribune that the organization would reach out directly to the girl's family if officials do learn her identity. As to any possible consequences after the girl's colossal sales, Doyle would not say.

Urbn Leaf's founder, Will Senn, said he would be happy to speak to the Girl Scouts council to clear up misunderstandings, and hopes his business can support local fundraising in the future.

Follow Josh Hafner on Twitter: @joshhafner