Representative Deon Tedder (D-Charleston) has filed a bill to put an end to stop, search, seizure, and arrests based on cannabis scent. South Carolina lawmakers believed that the smell of marijuana alone on a person or within a vehicle does not give law enforcement officers the go-ahead to search a person. Especially in a state like South Carolina with approved legislation for hemp production.
The Trump administration is preparing to move cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III of…
Based on the ruling, products that are legal federally as well as at the state…
The drug’s history of healing and experimentation stretches from ancient China to American counterculture —…
The new partnership will spotlight the stories of people still behind bars for cannabis, support…
Colombia is moving forward with a controversial plan to euthanize dozens of invasive hippos descended…
Imported hashish sustained mountain economies for centuries—until modern legalization and market economics erased it almost…