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The conversation took place at the Indiana Department of Veterans Affairs

On Friday morning, the meeting in the village was in the center of attention Indiana The Department of Veterans Affairs turned out to be medical marijuana.

The conversation between veteran Hoosiers for Medical Cannabis, Indiana NORML, and state agency leaders was planned about a month ago, but it came a day after the acting U.S. attorney general signed an order reclassifying state-licensed medical marijuana as a less dangerous drug.

Medical marijuana was reclassified from a Schedule I drug — a high-abuse, non-medical category of Schedule III drugs like heroin and cocaine — with less addictive drugs like prescription Tylenol.

“You have to understand that a lot of our state legislators have been waiting for this,” said veteran Jeff Staker. “The feds have made their move, and now it’s time for Indiana to make ours. And of course, we want to do it right.”

Staker has pushed for medical marijuana legislation for 10 years, arguing that it is a safer alternative to opioid painkillers prescribed to veterans for PTSD and chronic pain.

To read the rest of this article on WTHR, Click here

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Republican Attorneys General Sue to Block Trump’s Cannabis Rescheduling Order

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Republican Attorneys General Sue to Block Trump’s Cannabis Rescheduling Order

State attorneys general from Nebraska, Indiana and Louisiana last week filed a lawsuit challenging the Justice Department’s recent order to reschedule medical cannabis. Nebraska Examiner reports.

Nebraska AG Mike Hilgers, Louisiana AG Liz Murrill and Indiana AG Todd Rokita, all Republicans, argue in the lawsuit that the rescheduling move will make it easier to push adult legalization policies. The lawsuit also challenges the expanded production of medical cannabis and tax changes under the law the new federal regime.

AG Hilgers opposed Nebraska’s campaign to legalize medical cannabis in 2024, but about 7 in 10 voters approved the reforms. Hilgers is up for re-election this year and will face Democrat Jocelyn Brasher, a former Nebraska assistant attorney general.

“Nebraskans should be outraged that taxpayer resources are being spent to challenge the Trump administration’s medical cannabis reform on an issue overwhelmingly approved by voters at the ballot box. Mike Hilgers is … interfering with decisions that families, patients and doctors have already made clear they support.” – Brasher, in a statement

In Louisiana, lawmakers created a program to make medical cannabis accessible to patients with specific debilitating conditions, while in Indiana, cannabis is not legally available for any purpose.

Meanwhile, last December, President Trump issued an executive order calling for the rescheduling of cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III under the Controlled Substances Act. The Justice Department issued a follow-up order last month, officially making state-regulated medical cannabis products Schedule III. The latest order, however, does not affect other forms of cannabis, meaning that state-licensed adult-use operators are still violating federal law.

The DEA is planning hearings to consider the full rescheduling of cannabis out of Schedule I, which is supposed to be reserved for drugs with “no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.”

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Nebraska Attorney General Mike Hilgers had no immediate comment

The Republican attorneys general of Nebraska, Indiana and Louisiana filed a lawsuit over the Memorial Day weekend to stop Trump’s Justice Department order to reclassify marijuana as a less harmful drug.

The lawsuit, which the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit has consolidated with a similar lawsuit by marijuana opponent Smart Approaches to Marijuana, alleges that the Trump administration bypassed its normal rulemaking process.

The AGs argue that the waiver of normal public notice and comment periods jeopardizes the validity of the changes and write that reclassifying marijuana could also violate the 1967 International Narcotics Control Treaty.

Nebraska Attorney General Mike Hilgers had no immediate comment through a spokesman Wednesday, but he said many Nebraska law enforcement officials disagree with the president’s push to change how federal agencies classify marijuana.

The lawsuit challenges the federal government’s workaround, which essentially makes it a middleman that buys the drug from manufacturers, adds a nominal fee, and sells it back to meet the contract’s requirements.

Hilgers argued that loosening federal restrictions on marijuana as a Schedule I drug, like LSD and heroin, to a Schedule III drug, along with Tylenol with codeine, could make it easier to legalize recreational products.

To read the rest of this article on the Nebraska Examiner, Click here

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Report: Indiana Residents Spend About $2B on Cannabis Annually Despite Prohibition  

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Report: Indiana Residents Spend About $2B on Cannabis Annually Despite Prohibition  

Indiana residents spend nearly $2 billion on cannabis each year, despite legalizing neither medical nor adult cannabis in the state, according to a RAND study commissioned by the Richard M. Fairbanks Foundation. The report shows that the state currently spends between $10 million and $20 million annually to enforce its cannabis laws, while cannabis revenue could reach as much as $180 million annually — or about 1% of the state’s General Fund.

Three of Indiana’s four neighboring states—Illinois, Michigan, and Ohio—have legalized adult-use cannabis, resulting in 44% of Hoosiers living within a 50-mile drive of a licensed dispensary across state lines and another 96% living within 100 miles of a licensed dispensary. REPORT says.

The study found about 1.3 million Indiana Residents aged 12 and over have used cannabis in the past year, with about 929,000 of the group using cannabis in the past month, and about 433,000 using cannabis daily or weekly. In 2024, 13,250 Hoosiers were arrested for cannabis, with 90% of those arrests for possession; In 75% of these cases, other non-cannabis charges were filed.

The report notes that despite Indiana having the “most restrictive” cannabis laws in the country, intoxicating hemp products are “widely available” across the state.

TG joined Ganjapreneur in 2014 as a news writer and began hosting the Ganjapreneur podcast in 2016. He is based in upstate New York, where he also teaches media at a local university.

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