“An officer mentioned in an open way as the” sludge “religious operation and laughed. He also said,” Look how stupid, they wrote everything. “
Alixel Cabrera, Sending New Utah
Utah had a ban on flavored islands and a month ago, a former sugar house, sanctuary and a safe refuge to achieve contasty cartridges, to achieve spiritual and religious practices.
Electronic cigarettes were in line with other sacramentes that have been in the center of religious challenges in the state like psychedelic mushrooms and cannabis. But, after the location of Utah Law Enforcement, in August, these sacraments asked the legal question, with the Church of Sugar, both sanctuaries to start the issue.
“Official Riot Gear, AR-15S, pry bars and whirlwinds were necessarily entered in the sanctuaries, and immediately began with security systems and surveillance cameras with a crow bar.
During the official raids, cannabis and psilocybin products confiscated. The church was called the “sacrament of property”, as well as a thousand flavored flavored cartridges, blank checks, rare clergy, cash, tablets and partners.
The church asks the judge to enforce the law, to interfere with free free exercise of members and receive compensation. The institutions are also required by the South Saçes Lake Department of Police and Research Offices, to return the training and property of compulsory religious sensitivity.
In the sanctuary of the city of salt, “4.24 kilograms were caught in a flower.
In Blackhouse, “crude marijuana confiscated important quantities; thc, cookies, gums, sweets and similar products; and similar applications,” District lawyers said in his movement.
Joshua Robers, the church reverend, was arrested and reserved Salt Lake County in prison during the Sanctuary of the city of Salt. 3. It has several positions in the district court, having an internalized controlled substance, an internal third-degree crime.
The Salt Lake County Lawyers’ Office This month is constantly a matter of exclusion of the lawsuit and commenting.
Church
The Church of the Sugar Church is not a non-denial, nine states with psychoactive sacnances and the branches of Mexico, including cannabis and psilocybin mushrooms. Members must commit to the Church’s Code following the Code of Conduct.
“These are not casual practices,” the church wrote in its case, “deliberately structured and rooted in educational decades.”
The church mentioned the protections of the US Constitution and Federal Law, which cares about religious freedom in the archive. He also mentioned a small decision of a federal judge The faith group used by psilocybin mushrooms within its practice And the County of Utah has promised a temporary stoppage against the Organization and the Creator.
It will be partially in the state law in 2024.
Sugar attacks came after a day after that decision, the Church said. According to a statement of the sanctuary volunteers, the officers refused to give up, refusing, doctrinals and cleres. They have “mocked the religious affiliation.”
“An officer referred to religious operations as” sludge “. He laughed directly. He said,” when they look stupid, “” The Church lawsuit says.
However, prosecutors are defined as the Utah stores and are not supported by churches, as the trade department stated that many business organizations work in the same location of the Blackhouse Sanctuary LLC. In fact, the prosecutors wrote, claiming that activities were religious in the location of the sugar house.
The district lawyer has also emphasized that “Plaintiffs confirm the religious use of marijuana and psilocybin; no religious or practices related to non-irriguant unbelief or internal cartridges.”
After fifteen years of successful cooperation, managing director Moritz Böcking and the shareholders of Klasmann-Deilmann GmbH have mutually agreed to part ways. As of May 1, 2026, Moritz Böcking will hand over the position of managing director to Jan Astrup, who served as the company’s CEO in 2021/2022. Jan Astrup and Damian Ikemann will form the Board of Directors of the Klasmann-Deilmann Group from now on.
Klasmann-Deilmann thanks Moritz Böcking for his cooperation and the progress achieved in the transformation of the Klasmann-Deilmann Group. Moritz Böcking expanded Klasmann-Deilmann beyond the growing media business into new areas of commercial horticulture and promoted innovation and digitalization within the company. In addition, its achievements include the expansion of resources derived from renewable raw materials, as well as the acquisition of a subsidiary in Australia and production facilities in France and Canada, which operate in cooperation with external partners. He also significantly advanced Klasmann-Deilmann’s positioning as a global pioneer of sustainable development in the growing media industry, thereby making a decisive contribution to the company’s economic growth.
With Jan Astrup, Klasmann-Deilmann is getting an internationally experienced manager who has proven himself in the company and has extensive experience in raw materials, production, process optimization and technology. With the new CEO, raw materials and technology-driven areas for the substrate industry are now increasingly important at senior management level. Jan Astrup will strengthen the core commercial horticulture business and help develop the company for the future.
Rep. James Comer (R-KY) introduced the delay proposal as an amendment to the Farm Bill, while Rep. Mary Miller (R-IL) introduced an expedited approach. Neither will move forward, however, with Comer withdrawing his measure and the House Rules Committee failing to vote on Miller’s.
Hemp derivatives containing less than 0.3 percent delta-9 THC by weight of the drug were made federally legal under the 2018 Farm Bill signed by President Donald Trump in his first term. But late last year, Trump signed new legislation containing provisions that will redefine hemp so that only products with a total of 0.4 milligrams of THC per container will be legal starting Nov. 12.
Comer’s amendment, sponsored by Reps. Kelly Morrison (D-MN), Ilhan Omar (D-MN) and Morgan Griffith (R-VA), would have delayed the ban until November 2027.
According to Miller’s proposal, however, the ban will begin the day the new Farm Bill takes effect. However, it is unclear based on progress in Congress whether the large-scale farming legislation will actually become law, and the legislation could not pass until after the current recriminalization date.
Comer told the panel at Monday’s meeting that his amendment would “protect American farmers” and “help the hemp industry and the thousands of jobs that use and rely on these products.”
“It is clear that Congress needs more time to pass legislation that protects jobs, eliminates bad actors, standardizes labeling and requires third-party testing,” he said. “My amendment would give Congress another year, until November 2027, to develop this solution.”
It is not clear why he decided to remove it from the annex to the proposal Farm BillAlso known as the Farm, Food, and National Security Act of 2026, or HR 7567.
Griffith, a member of the Rules Committee who sponsored Comer’s amendment, noted that there are “a lot of hemp products from overseas that don’t have third-party testing” on the market, “frankly all kinds of junk.”
He said the real solution is for the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to regulate the products, citing a separate bill he has introduced on the issue, but argued that “we have to have time to adjust,” which he said would provide the delay amendment.
Meanwhile, Rep. Andy Barr (R-KY) also introduced an amendment to the bill that, according to the sponsor’s summary, “changes the definition of hemp to protect the legal hemp market, creating a regulatory framework that protects children, bans synthetics, and ensures that products on the market are of American origin.”
The congressman later withdrew the proposal for undisclosed reasons.
Last week, Vince Haley, director of the White House Domestic Policy Council, and James Braid, assistant to the president for legislative affairs, sent hemp policy suggestions to Barr, who is helping lead efforts to establish regulations for the plant as an alternative to prohibition.
“We appreciate your work to advance policy,” the executive order Trump signed in December, which included provisions to protect Americans’ access to CBD products, the staff wrote in a letter to Congress.
“We are submitting draft legislation and comments to your account to address the final statutory definition of hemp-derived cannabinoid products to ensure that Americans have access to adequate full-spectrum CBD products while maintaining Congress’ intent to limit the sale of products that pose serious health risks,” White House officials said, according to a social media screencast. “We are open to discussion and further technical assistance.”
The annex to the administration’s proposed legislative text has not been released publicly, and the White House and Barr’s office did not immediately respond to Marihuana Moment’s request for more details.
It’s not clear from the text of the letter whether the White House was proactively sending legislative proposals to the lawmaker or whether they were responding to something sent by his office, though two cannabis industry sources suggested to Marihuana Moment that Barr was sending the language to the administration, and then providing technical feedback.
“I’m calling on Congress to update the Act so Americans can continue to have access to the full-spectrum CBD products they trust and support, while maintaining Congress’ intent to restrict the sale of products that pose health risks,” the president said in a Truth Social message Thursday, the same day his administration announced it is moving forward to re-regulate marijuana.
“We need to do this RIGHT and FAST, especially for those who have found CBD to help them,” he said. “Also, I’m told it will help our BIG FARMERS that we love and will always be around.”
The Farm Bill passed by the previous committee includes provisions to help the hemp industry and farmers who grow cannabis for industrial purposes, such as fiber and grain. For example, the legislation would amend statutes related to states and tribes developing regulatory plans for industrial hemp production, including policies on testing, sampling, background checks and record keeping.
Other bipartisan hemp reform bills are pending in Congress.
Ernst withdrew his name, however, as a sponsor of the legislation. His office did not respond to Marihuana Moment’s request for clarification on the move.
As hemp products become more popular among consumers, some big brands are trying to get in on the action.
The main retailer Target, for example, is expanding its involvement in the hemp-derived THC beverage market. Last year, the company began a pilot program in 10 stores in Minnesota that sell cannabis drinks. That apparently went well, and now the company has secured licenses from Minnesota regulators to sell lower-potency edible hemp products — including THC drinks — in 72 stores in the state.
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North Carolina lawmakers say they’re fueling debate over the state’s marijuana laws — a move by the Trump administration to reclassify it as a less dangerous drug.
Across the country, a set of laws and enforcements regulate marijuana. The drug is illegal under federal law, but dozens of US states have legalized it. And almost all states have legalized medical marijuana prescriptions for certain ailments. North Carolina is among the remaining states to resist any form of legalization. Republican politicians in North Carolina have resisted passing any bills to legalize or decriminalize marijuana, despite public opinion polls showing broad public support for such changes.
Senate President Phil Berger said he expects his chamber to revisit efforts to legalize medical marijuana this week. “We will have a conversation within our caucus if they are interested in whether we do something,” Berger told reporters Tuesday.
The recent actions of Republican President Donald Trump may add a new dimension to these conversations. Trump’s acting attorney general on Thursday signed the drug classification as a less dangerous and less strictly regulated drug than marijuana. Federal law does not legalize marijuana for medical or recreational use.