Trump poised to reclassify marijuana
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Trump's giving cannabis stocks a lift
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CNN senior data reporter Harry Enten said on Tuesday that President Donald Trump may hurt Democrats politically if he reclassifies marijuana. Trump told reporters on Monday that he is considering reclassifying marijuana from a Schedule I to a Schedule III drug,
Under the new rules, business will have to reveal any agreements “that affect ownership, control or financial interests in cannabis operations.” By Rebecca Rivas, Missouri Independent Missouri cannabis regulators have routinely revoked microbusiness licenses for relying on contracts they’ve publicly characterized as “predatory.
Rob Reiner and his wife, Michele Singer Reiner, had a guest staying at their home who left prior to their murders on Sunday, December 14, “because of how insane their son was acting, not just in general but towards the guest,” a source tells the National Enquirer. “They literally fled because they felt so uncomfortable […]
The main practical benefits would be tax relief for the cannabis industry and fewer barriers to medical research.
A GOP congressman says President Donald Trump would “wrong” to move forward with a plan to reschedule marijuana, which he described as a “gateway drug” that leads to the use of “harder substances”—despite numerous studies contradicting that theory.
Auburn police discovered 29 jars of marijuana labeled as "free weed" near Placer High School, raising safety concerns.
Trump's decision to move marijuana to Schedule III could ease taxes and expand medical access, but industry leaders warn it may also trigger stricter federal oversight and new legal risks.
The U.S. Supreme Court is declining to take up a case challenging the constitutionality of federal marijuana prohibition—an issue that even one of the bench’s more conservative members, Justice Clarance Thomas,