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Matt Gaetz Pictured Reviewing Contract To Provide Top Marijuana Company With ‘Administration-Related’ Support Amid Rescheduling Push

Published
10 hours agoon

Former Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) was reportedly photographed reviewing a document that appears to be a draft contract to provide services—including “administration-related guidance”—to a firm affiliated with the major marijuana company Trulieve. The visible portion of the document describes a lucrative bonus if a certain “matter resolves,” with an “additional ‘Super Success Fee’” for other “exclusive policy remedies.”
Gaetz, who was President Donald Trump’s first pick to serve as attorney general before he withdrew, was a rare example of a pro-legalization GOP congressman. He resigned from Congress amid unrelated controversies, but he remains a staunch Trump ally.
Details of the apparent agreement—first reported by The Daily Beast—are sparse, as the person who took a screenshot of Gaetz on his laptop during a flight was only able to capture a segment of it. It’s also unclear whether a firm hired by Trulieve sent him the proposed contract or if Gaetz himself was drafting it for consideration—and the company’s name is misspelled as “Truleive” in the available excerpt.
Marijuana Moment reached out to Trulieve and Gaetz for comment, but representatives were not available.
What the document seems to show, however, is a potential agreement where Gaetz would provide “legal representation,” “consulting” and “administration-related guidance” in lobbying efforts to a firm associated with Trulieve. It indicates that Gaetz would get $250,000 if the certain “MATTER resolves.”
What “matter” the document is referring to is unclear. But Trulieve has pushed for various federal reforms such as marijuana rescheduling and industry banking access. It also spent tens of millions of dollars on 2024 marijuana legalization ballot campaign in Florida that ultimately fell short.
The deal would also involve an additional “Super Success Fee” for “exclusive policy remedies,” but the exact dollar amount of that fee is cut off in the screenshot—with The Daily Beast reasoning that it is likely to read “$2,000,000″— and it’s not clear what those policies remedies entail.
The document was posted as a reply comment on a TikTok video that’s gained national attention for other reasons, with Gaetz captured reading text messages with his mother about foreign policy and personal finance issues.
@tidesofmarch Replying to @CυԃԃʅყDҽαԃKιƚƚყ ♬ original sound – 🤷🏽♀️💁🏽♀️🤦🏽♀️
In a surprise development during Trump’s presidential campaign last year, he did endorse the Florida measure Trulieve backed, as well as federal rescheduling and allowing licensed cannabis businesses to access the banking system like other traditional companies. He’s been silent on the issue, at least publicly, since then.
Notably, Trump’s endorsement of the Florida initiative followed a meeting he had with Trulieve CEO Kim Rivers, who also did not respond to a request for comment.
Unlike Trump, however, Gaetz did not back the Florida ballot measure. He didn’t speak to the merits of Amendment 3, but he said the reform should be enacted statutorily so that there’s more flexibility for the legislature to adjust the law in the future as opposed to via a constitutional amendment.
Trulieve contributed $750,000 to Trump’s inaugural committee following his election last November, Federal Election Commission (FEC) records show.
Combined with the $250,000 that another cannabis company, Curaleaf, donated to the inauguration via U.S. Cannabis Council (USCC), Trump’s team took in at least $1 million from the marijuana industry ahead of his swearing-in ceremony for a second term.
Gaetz, for his part, has been particularly vocal about cannabis policy issues in recent months.
Just this week, the former congressman reiterated his own support for rescheduling cannabis—suggesting in an interview with a Florida Republican lawmaker that the GOP could win more of the youth vote by embracing marijuana reform.
Gaetz also said last month that Trump’s endorsement of a Schedule III reclassification was essentially an attempt to shore up support among young voters rather than a sincere reflection of his personal views about cannabis.
A survey conducted by a GOP pollster affiliated with Trump that was released in April found that a majority of Republicans back a variety of cannabis reforms, including rescheduling. And, notably, they’re even more supportive of allowing states to legalize marijuana without federal interference compared to the average voter.
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Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on Patreon to get access.
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Meanwhile, Trump picked former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi (R) to run DOJ, and the Senate confirmed that choice. During her confirmation hearings, Bondi declined to say how she planned to navigate key marijuana policy issues. And as state attorney general, she opposed efforts to legalize medical cannabis.
Adding to the uncertainty around the fate of the rescheduling proposal, Trump’s nominee to lead DEA, Terrance Cole, has previously voiced concerns about the dangers of marijuana and linked its use to higher suicide risk among youth.
During an in-person hearing before the Judiciary Committee in April, Cole said examining the rescheduling proposal will be “one of my first priorities” if he was confirmed for the role, saying it’s “time to move forward” on the stalled process—but again without clarifying what end result he would like to see.
DEA recently notified an agency judge that the proceedings are still on hold—with no future actions currently scheduled. The matter sat without action before an acting administrator, Derek Maltz, who has called cannabis a “gateway drug” and linked its use to psychosis. Maltz has since left the position.
Amid the stalled marijuana rescheduling process that’s carried over from the last presidential administration, congressional researchers recently reiterated that lawmakers could enact the reform themselves with “greater speed and flexibility” if they so choose, while potentially avoiding judicial challenges.
Meanwhile, a newly formed coalition of professional athletes and entertainers, led by retired boxer Mike Tyson, sent a letter to Trump on Friday—thanking him for past clemency actions while emphasizing the opportunity he has to best former President Joe Biden by rescheduling marijuana, expanding pardons and freeing up banking services for licensed cannabis businesses.

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
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US Lawmaker Who Lost Limbs in War Convinces House to Allow Veteran Access to Cannabis

Published
4 hours agoon
June 27, 2025
Before being elected to Congress, U.S. House Rep. Brian Mast, R-Fla., was unconscious for more than a week in 2010, when he woke up missing two legs and a finger at Walter Reed Medical Center in Bethesda, Md.
The U.S. Army veteran was deployed to Afghanistan, where a roadside improvised explosive device (IED) in Kandahar resulted in catastrophic injuries during his work as a bomb disposal expert under the Joint Special Operations Command.
Mast recounted his experience as a double-leg amputee while introducing an amendment June 25 on the U.S. House floor.
“What I woke up to was being on a laundry list of medications,” he said. “I had an epidural. I had oral morphines and oxys. I had antidepressants, anti-inflammatories, heavy sleep sedatives. I had a Dilaudid drip and a number of other things that I can’t even remember to this point—all at once. I had not been on any of these things before in my life.”
Mast provided his testimony as a support mechanism to allow military veterans access to medical cannabis. He and Rep. Dave Joyce, R-Ohio, who co-chair the Congressional Cannabis Caucus, were successful on June 25 in attaching an amendment via a voice vote to the Military Construction, Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies (MilCon-VA) Appropriations Act for fiscal year 2026.
The amendment would authorize the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to provide recommendations to veterans to participate in state-licensed medical cannabis programs.
“My father was wounded, left for dead in World War II, and he came home,” Joyce said on the House floor. “I know what it takes for these people and the hurt that they’ve gone through on behalf of their country, and they deserve every option available to bring them back to what they were before they left on our behalf.”
The GOP-controlled House passed the underlying appropriations legislation in a 218-206 vote with two Democrats joining the majority. The bill would provide more than $152 billion in overall discretionary spending and $300 billion for mandatory programs, fully funding veterans’ medical care at $131.4 billion, according to the House Appropriations Committee.
While the bill wouldn’t fund medical cannabis care, Mast’s amendment would authorize the VA to provide recommendations to veterans to participate in state-licensed medical cannabis programs.
While 40 states have legalized medical cannabis, federal law forbids the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) from completing forms or registering veterans for participation in state-sanctioned cannabis programs—most of which require a doctor’s recommendation and include post-traumatic stress disorder as a qualifying condition.
The VHA is the largest integrated health care system in the U.S., providing services to more than 9 million veterans at roughly 1,400 facilities nationwide.
Under the status quo, veterans often have to choose between their VA doctor and access to medical cannabis, and “that’s wrong,” Mast said.
After coming home from Afghanistan, Mast said he went through a gamut of withdrawal symptoms while coming off narcotics, from extreme irritability to extreme bowel movements and insomnia.
“The state that these narcotics—in many cases—leave our veterans [in] are at the most extreme end of it: states of suicide,” he said. “At other ends of it, just extreme states of dissatisfaction and lacking purpose in life. And, in some cases, it does leave them in a better condition. But the point I’m making with this true story is that veterans need to have options outside of these narcotics.”
While Mast introduced the Veterans Equal Access Act on Feb. 14, that standalone legislation has yet to receive a subcommittee hearing. By successfully attaching the nuts and bolts of the two-page legislation as an amendment to the MilCon-VA bill, Mast has bypassed the committee process and fast-tracked the underlying intent.
Specifically, the amendment states that none of the funds appropriated or otherwise made available to the VA may be used to enforce Veterans Health Directive 1315 as it relates to:
- The policy stating that “VHA providers are prohibited from completing forms or registering veterans for participation in a state-approved marijuana program”;
- The directive for the “Deputy Under Secretary for Health for Operations and Management” to ensure that “medical facility directors are aware that it is VHA policy for providers to assess veteran use of marijuana but providers are prohibited from recommending, making referrals to or completing paperwork for veteran participation in state marijuana programs”; and
- The directive for the “VA Medical Facility Director” to ensure that “VA facility staff are aware of the following” … “[t]he prohibition recommending, making referrals to or completing forms and registering veterans for participation in state-approved marijuana programs.”
“[Veterans] need to have the ability when they’re being seen by their primary care physician inside of the VA to have discussions about whether cannabis is or is not right for them,” Mast said. “They need to be able to talk to their medical provider about what they fill out on the paperwork, what is the right dosage amount, how that’s going to interact with any other medications that they might be on, how it might affect their blood pressure or other things going on with them personally.
“And if we’re not giving that option to have that conversation at the most serious level without worrying about some kind of reprisal for the doctor or otherwise, then we are doing our veterans a disservice.”
Should Mast’s amendment remain in the final enactment of the MilCon-VA Appropriations Act, it could have broader implications for federal reform.
Federally funded VA doctors providing recommendations or prescriptions for medical cannabis would add to cannabis rescheduling advocates’ argument that the plant has “currently accepted medical use” in the U.S. and, therefore, cannot be classified as a Schedule I drug under the Controlled Substances Act.
But that wasn’t on Mast’s mind during this Wednesday’s floor session.
“The fact of the matter is, while I have heard of many of my brothers and sisters in arms being in a state of suicide because of the narcotics they’ve been on, I’ve yet to hear about any of them attributing a state of suicide to the cannabis that they have had as a part of their life,” he said.

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
featured
Tilray Medical Publishes Pioneering Research on Pharmacokinetics of THC, CBD Formulations

Published
5 hours agoon
June 27, 2025
[PRESS RELEASE] – NEW YORK, June 26, 2025 – Tilray Medical, a division of Tilray Brands Inc. and a global leader in medical cannabis, empowering the therapeutic alliance between patients and health care practitioners to make informed individualized health decisions, announced the publication of a scientific study. This new research focuses on comparing the bioavailability of different cannabinoid formulations, taking a step forward in the understanding of medical cannabis.
The study aimed to assess the pharmacokinetic parameters and relative bioavailability of two D9-tetrahydrocannabinol: cannabidiol (THC:CBD) formulations:
- an orally administered: Tilray THC:CBD extract; and
- an oromucosally administered nabiximols formulation.
This pilot crossover study counterbalanced:
- 1 mL of orally administered Tilray THC:CBD extract (10 mg/mL each of THC and CBD); and
- oromucosally administered nabiximols (four sprays of 2.7 mg THC and 2.5 mg CBD per spray, for a total dose of 10.8 mg THC and 10 mg CBD).
Blood samples were obtained pre-dose and at 16 post-dose time points over 24 hours. Pharmacokinetic parameters were calculated for THC, 11-hydroxy-tetrahydrocannabinol (11-OH-THC), and CBD.
Conducted with 12 healthy volunteers (six male, six female) under fasting conditions, the results revealed that the Cmax for THC and CBD was significantly higher for the Tilray THC:CBD extract compared to nabiximols, and neither Tmax nor AUC was significantly different for the two treatments. Interestingly, the Cmax for nabiximols was significantly higher in males compared to females. Under both treatment conditions, THC and CBD were undetectable 24 hours post-dose, and 11-OH-THC was markedly reduced from its peak. Notably, no serious adverse events were reported.
This pilot study shows that oral administration of Tilray THC:CBD extract formulation achieved higher THC and CBD concentrations within a shorter timeframe compared to the oromucosal delivery of nabiximols. These findings may have significant implications for clinical populations using these formulations therapeutically.
José Tempero, Tilray’s medical director, said, “By advancing our understanding of cannabinoid pharmacokinetics, we are better equipped to develop formulations that can significantly enhance therapeutic outcomes. We extend our heartfelt thanks to our partners in this study for their invaluable contributions and collaboration.”
Denise Faltishchek, chief strategy officer and head of International at Tilray, said, “This pioneering research exemplifies our commitment to advancing the science of medical cannabis. By deepening our understanding of cannabinoid pharmacokinetics, we strive to enhance the therapeutic potential of our products, ultimately improving the quality of life for patients globally. Our goal is to continue driving innovation and providing patients with safe, effective, consistent and reliable medical cannabis solutions for patients around the world.”
Tilray Medical is a leading provider of EU-GMP-certified and pharmaceutical-grade medical cannabis products, having supplied more than 20 countries with a comprehensive portfolio of THC and CBD products. Tilray has supported medical trials globally, across Europe, Canada, the United States, Australia, and Latin America, studying the efficacy of medical cannabis as a treatment for indications including pediatric epilepsy, refractory pediatric epilepsy, cancer-induced nausea and vomiting, HIV, essential tremor, breast cancer disorders, post-traumatic stress disorder and alcohol-use disorders.

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
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Aurora Expands Patient Access to Medical Cannabis in Canada With Extended Compassionate Pricing Program

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June 27, 2025
[PRESS RELEASE] – EDMONTON, Alberta, June 26, 2025 – Aurora Cannabis Inc., the Canadian-based leading global medical cannabis company, is pleased to have recently expanded the eligibility of its medical compassionate pricing program in Canada.
As part of the company’s ongoing commitment to making medical cannabis more accessible to patients, the yearly income eligibility of the program has increased from CA$40,000 to CA$60,000 for Aurora patients through AuroraMedical.com.
“As over half of the country’s adult population fits within this income threshold, our compassionate pricing program represents the most accessible, inclusive pricing plan to access medical cannabis in Canada,” said Geoff Hoover, senior vice president of Canadian Commercial at Aurora. “We’re committed to breaking down barriers to access high-quality medical cannabis, and this change empowers more patients to explore different treatment options at pricing they can afford.”
The changes to the compassionate pricing program are available alongside new medical cannabis products, including:
- Aurora | Mediora Minis – Cannatonic CBD Flower, Sativa (10mg)
- Daily Special | Sativa J’s – THC Pre-Rolls, Sativa (7 x 0.3g)
- WMMC | Seasonal Stash Petro Biscuit – THC Flower, Indica (10mg)
In addition to the compassionate pricing program, Aurora offers resources to seniors, pediatric patients, veterans, first responders, and others seeking care through medical cannabis. Patients can visit www.auroramedical.com for more information and to connect with the Aurora client care team for further support.

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.

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