But for active-duty military and veterans, nothing will really change. Currently, marijuana use is still punishable under the ...
At President Joe Biden’s urging, the Department of Justice has officially started the process to reclassify marijuana as a less dangerous drug than most prescription painkillers and many ...
So, what exactly does this mean and how will it impact local dispensaries? News12's Emily Young went to one in White Plains to find out. Under the president's proposal, marijuana would go from a ...
For now, marijuana use remains subject to punishment under the Uniform Code of Military Justice, and veterans are still not ...
President Joe Biden on Thursday officially announced that his administration took a "major step" to reclassify marijuana as a less dangerous substance, a seismic shift in the country’s drug policy.
The drug would be listed as Schedule III substance if the proposal is approved. The Biden administration announced Thursday that it's officially moving forward with a proposal to reclassify ...
The Justice Department (DOJ) took a major step towards rescheduling marijuana, formally starting the process to move the drug to a less restrictive Schedule III designation. “This is monumental.
The Department of Justice plans to issue a notice of proposed rulemaking on Thursday that would reclassify marijuana to a less restrictive category, according to two Biden administration officials ...
A federal reclassification should also reassure banks and credit card companies wary of dealing with cannabis businesses they ...
At the White House briefing on Thursday, press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre spoke about the Department of Justice’s proposal to reclassify marijuana as less dangerous, moving it from a Schedule I to a ...