The president-elect recently affirmed that he supports legalizing marijuana for recreational use. His stance means cannabis ...
Toxic pesticides were found in cannabis grown at licensed grow houses and offered to medical dispensaries. Under current regulations, no one can stop it from hitting the shelves but the budtender ...
These broad-spectrum softgels are the company’s answer to a high potency product without adding THC. The softgels are available in two strong potencies: 100 milligrams (mg) per serving and 200 ...
The sheriff’s office says probable cause was developed to search the vehicle, and fentanyl, meth, pills, marijuana, and drug paraphernalia were located. The deputy arrested Gonzalez and she was ...
SUMMIT COUNTY, Utah (KUTV) — A man was arrested with more than 80 pounds of marijuana, six bags of psilocybin mushrooms, 4,000 MDMA pills, 200 THC cartridges, dozens of packages of edibles ...
New York State regulators have imposed a ban on the sale of caffeine-infused cannabis pills, frequently used as an energy and productivity enhancer. Research suggests combining caffeine and ...
No more wake and bake! State regulators have banned the distribution of cannabis pills that are also infused with caffeine — a combo that’s been a popular pick-me-up for fitness buffs and ...
Vaping addiction among people hooked on booze or drugs has soared by nearly a third ... The group – which has 200 UK detox and rehab beds – says 5.4million young Brits ­regularly vape.
STOUGHTON, Wis. (WFRV) – A Wisconsin-based pizza restaurant has issued an apology after it was discovered that some of the pizza served to customers was contaminated with THC. Officials with ...
They got zaza on the ‘za. A Wisconsin pizza parlor accidentally served THC-laced pie to dozens of patrons — causing an outbreak of illness and calls to paramedics. Famous Yeti’s Pizza ...
Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. Share STOUGHTON, Wis. (AP) — Pizza inadvertently laced with THC has apparently sickened dozens of people ...
In the complaint, the attorneys general argue that expanding access to abortion pills poses a potential injury to their states because it leads to lower birth rates, including among teenagers.