By Cheryl Miller | February 1, 2018
Marijuana businesses and related trade associations spent more than $1.6 million in 2017 lobbying. Here's a look at some of the shops that got the work.
By Cheryl Miller | February 1, 2018
The U.S. attorney general's cancellation of the Cole memo "does not mean that petitioners now face an elevated danger of self-incrimination by cooperating with the IRS audits," a Justice Department tax lawyer tells a Colorado judge.
By Dara Kam, News Service of Florida | February 1, 2018
Florida health officials have blamed delays in issuing new medical marijuana licenses on a court fight about a law requiring one of the coveted licenses to go to a black farmer who meets certain criteria.
By Cheryl Miller | January 30, 2018
"Jeff Sessions has taken us steps backwards," state Treasurer John Chiang said. "And so it's crystal clear that we're going to have to face some additional challenges."
By Cheryl Miller | January 29, 2018
Nontraditional payment service providers are flocking to serve state-legal cannabis markets that remain largely shunned by major banks.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Editorial Board | January 26, 2018
The sale or use of marijuana is a crime. Connecticut residency doesn't immunize a person from potential federal prosecution. And for lawyers the lesson is that it's our obligation to follow the rule of law, or risk the consequences for failing to do so.
By Cheryl Miller | January 24, 2018
Patrick Soluri and Osha Meserve, representing the California Growers Association, a six-year-old coalition of cannabis farmers, have asked a Sacramento County Superior Court judge to block the state from issuing multiple small-scale cultivation permits to a single person or business.
By Karen Sloan | January 24, 2018
The University of the Pacific McGeorge School of Law is hosting a workshop on the ins and outs of legal pot in California, and the risks and obstacles marijuana businesses face.
By Andrew Denney | January 23, 2018
A growing number of states are moving toward marijuana legalization, but product providers are still having difficulties in banking and finding protection for intellectual property, said speakers and attendees to a cannabis law panel held Tuesday at the New York State Bar Association's annual meeting.
By Josefa Velasquez | January 22, 2018
State Sen. Diane Savino, a Staten Island Democrat, sent a letter to each of New York's four U.S. attorneys asking them to allow New York's program to continue despite Attorney General Jeff Sessions' rollback earlier this month of the Obama-era Cole memo.
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