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Cannabis industry case challenging prohibition hits Supreme Court (Newsletter: October 27, 2025)

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Hemp dispute in Congress; TX medical marijuana expansion; KY medical cannabis update; Study: More Americans use marijuana than cigarettes

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/ TOP THINGS TO KNOW

Marijuana companies filed a petition asking the U.S. Supreme Court to take up their lawsuit that seeks to block the enforcement of federal prohibition against their state-legal activities.

As Congress considers how to address hemp through pending appropriations legislation, state attorneys general are circulating a letter asking lawmakers to “ensure intoxicating THC products are taken off the market” and Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) is supporting language to study “best practices” on state regulation.

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear (D) announced that the state now has 15,000 registered medical cannabis patients and that by next week regulators will have approved businesses in every category—completing the “full process cycle from cultivation to dispensary.”

The Texas Department of Public Safety adopted changes to medical cannabis rules to expand patient access by licensing additional dispensaries and setting security requirements for satellite locations.

A new study shows that more Americans now use marijuana than smoke cigarettes—”suggesting possible substitution driven by changing harm perceptions, evolving legislation and shifting norms.”

  • “Cigarette-only use declined, while cannabis-only use increased across nearly all sociodemographic groups.”

The Michigan House Regulatory Reform Committee held a hearing on bills to change legal marijuana possession limits and alter rules for addressing cannabis industry violations.

South Dakota cannabis reform advocates expressed alarm after a meeting of the legislature’s Medical Marijuana Oversight Committee gave prohibitionists a platform—stoking fears the panel is part of a coordinated effort to restrict or repeal patient access.

The Oregon Health Authority is seeking to dismiss a lawsuit alleging that the state’s psilocybin program discriminates against homebound disabled patients who can’t travel to licensed psychedelic services centers.

Former Idaho Attorney General Jim Jones (R) argues in a new op-ed that the Trump administration’s attacks on suspected drug boats are a “stupid tactic because it destroys the evidence and does not allow for interrogation of the suspects” while also putting military officers “in an untenable position.”

/ FEDERAL

President Donald Trump hosted a roundtable meeting on his administration’s efforts to combat drug cartels, saying he will not seek congressional authorization for military strikes on suspected traffickers.

Several Republican senators are raising questions about the Trump administration’s military attacks on suspected drug boats.

The House bill to federally legalize marijuana got one new cosponsor for a total of 57.

/ STATES

Montana Gov. Greg Gianforte (R) discussed a program to use marijuana revenue to fund drug treatment that he supports, saying, “I felt if we are going to hand out a Schedule 1 drug, we might as well use revenues to pay for addiction recovery.”

The Georgia House Blue-Ribbon Study Committee on Georgia’s Medical Marijuana and Hemp Policies held its final meeting.

New York regulators’ request for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit to reconsider a lower court’s ruling on residency privileges in marijuana licensing was rejected.

Tennessee regulators entered into an agreed declaratory order clarifying the regulatory framework for hemp-derived cannabinoid product businesses during the transition to new state regulations.

Arizona regulators announced a recall of marijuana products due to possible contamination with aspergillus.

Ohio regulators announced recalls of medical cannabis products that aren’t marked with a universal THC symbol on each serving and that failed pesticide testing.

Oklahoma regulators announced a recall of medical cannabis products due to improper testing methods.

Washington, D.C. regulators proposed changes to medical cannabis rules.

Minnesota’s top marijuana regulator acknowledged frustration that dispensaries are expressing about product availability.

Maryland regulators posted guidance about marijuana business inspections.


Marijuana Moment is tracking hundreds of cannabis, psychedelics and drug policy bills in state legislatures and Congress this year. Patreon supporters pledging at least $25/month get access to our interactive maps, charts and hearing calendar so they don’t miss any developments.


Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on Patreon to get access.

/ LOCAL

The 143rd Judicial District, Texas district attorney is facing a lawsuit seeking to remove her from office over accusations she has refused to enforce drug laws amid a viral video she posted of herself smoking marijuana.

/ INTERNATIONAL

The International Criminal Court rejected former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s challenge to its jurisdiction in a prosecution related to killings in the nation’s bloody “war on drugs.”

German officials increased the amount of allowable cannabis imports for medical and scientific purposes.

/ SCIENCE & HEALTH

A review concluded that “cannabinoids provide modest, condition-specific analgesia and should be considered adjunctive rather than first-line options, reserved for patients unresponsive to conventional therapy.”

A study found that “group psilocybin-assisted therapy plus [Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction] was associated with clinically significant improvement in depressive symptoms without serious [adverse events] and with greater reduction in symptoms than MBSR alone.”

/ BUSINESS

atai Life Sciences and Beckley Psytech Limited announced that the Food and Drug Administration granted Breakthrough Therapy designation to their 5-MeO-DMT benzoate nasal spray for adult patients with treatment-resistant depression.

Canadian retailers sold C$498.7 million worth of legal marijuana products in August.

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Photo courtesy of Chris Wallis // Side Pocket Images.

Marijuana Moment is made possible with support from readers. If you rely on our cannabis advocacy journalism to stay informed, please consider a monthly Patreon pledge.

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CULTA Appoints Cannabis Industry Veteran Joseph Andreae as CEO

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[PRESS RELEASE] – BALTIMORE, Oct. 27, 2025 – CULTA, Maryland’s most trusted source of premium cannabis, announced the appointment of Joseph Andreae as CEO. This shift in leadership underscores the company’s commitment to cultivating craft cannabis, maintaining quality, and building community within the Maryland cannabis industry.

“Having grown up in the greater DMV area and having spent a lot of time in Maryland, I know firsthand how special this state is, and that includes its cannabis industry,” Andreae said. “CULTA is truly an embodiment of this and the dedicated Marylanders who keep the engine running day-in-and-day-out, and I look forward to having the opportunity to play a role in further shaping this brand and cementing our position as a leader in this fast-growing East Coast market.”

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Andreae brings a wealth of experience from mature cannabis programs throughout the country, paired with a specific appreciation for the Maryland market. Before joining CULTA, he held leadership roles at several large-scale, vertically integrated cannabis companies, including Story Cannabis, Glass House Brands and NorCal Cannabis Co.

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In this new role, Andreae will prioritize further building an experienced leadership team with a deep knowledge of the legal industry and the local community, leveraging CULTA’s infrastructure to drive product development and quality improvement, maintaining a strong company culture and brand identity, and differentiating from competitors through fresh company values that prioritize investments in their staff and customers, cultivation with integrity, and elevation of the perceptions of cannabis and its benefits.

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Andreae’s appointment comes as CULTA seeks to firmly establish itself as Maryland’s leading service and toll processing entity and a top-three seller across relevant house brand categories.



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The Creature from the Black Leather Lagoon

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April 18th, 1977. Hollywood, CA.

There was something foul and electric in the air that Monday night at the Starwood. The kind of charge you only find when the floor’s slick with beer and the crowd reeks of leather, cigarettes, and bad choices. The volatile energy of a live wire hissing on a wet dance floor—spitting, sparking, waiting to kill whoever got too close.

The room was a zoo of freaks—burnouts with thousand-yard stares, thrill junkies itching for damage, leather-clad criminals with joints glued to pierced lips, and the occasional college zombie dragging a terrified date into the pit.

The air was swamp-thick: sweat, stale PBR, clove smoke, and always weed. Heavy clouds slithered low across the crowd like cold glycerin—a false floor drenched in Blade Runner-neon—perfumed with Acapulco Gold, Thai Stick, Golden Voice. 

Then The Damned hit. And whatever fragile order had been holding the room together dissolved into lawless beauty.

Captain Sensible hunched over his bass like Gollum rigging dynamite. Rat Scabies vanished behind a drum kit that looked ready to detonate. Brian James hacked his guitar like Norman Bates in a thrift-store suit, tie clinging on like a hostage.

And then Vanian. A ghoul from a Hammer Horror reel. He ripped off a vinyl mask to show the real mask beneath: hospital-white skin, slick black hair, eyes wide and vacant like possession. As though the dark itself was being torn inside out. His voice was an exorcism.

They tore into the Stooges’ “I Feel Alright” at double-time, guitars squealing like pigs on the block. Vanian stalked the stage in spasms—half epileptic fit, half black-mass sermon. The stage rattled like a runaway freight train.

You either surrendered to the blitzkrieg or fled to the bar. 

Photo by Jose Antonio Gallego Vázquez via Unsplash

Blood in the Pit

That was SoCal punk then. Step into the pit and you stumbled away bruised, soaked, bleeding from god-knows-where, but alive in a way suburbia could never manufacture.

A busted lip was simply proof of purchase. Cig burns on your jacket were rites of passage. Kids got concussed and came back swinging, arms pinwheeling in the pit like upturned helicopters. 

Violence wasn’t the point, but it always came with the territory.

By the late ’70s, rock ’n roll had abandoned a generation. The kids who were left out did what the ignored always do: turned basements, ballrooms, and half-legal vet halls into sanctuaries.

And through every room drifted the same fog: weed smoke. Not a garnish, but an essential ingredient. A fifth band member with no name, hanging in the rafters.

Thai Stick joints smoldering to black nails. Acapulco Gold changing hands in parking lots like secret handshakes. Seeds and stems surgically removed with the reverence of an Itamae shaving toro.

Weed was the battery. The voltage in the circuit.

The Outlaw Benefactor

But punk didn’t pay. Five-dollar tickets and photocopied flyers couldn’t keep the lights on. The kids were broke, the bands broke, the clubs hostile. So who kept the ears ringing?

Behind the distortion stood a man most never saw: Gary Tovar—smuggler, outlaw businessman, and the unlikeliest patron saint SoCal punk would ever know.

Born in Los Angeles in 1952, carted off to Huntington Beach at twelve, and dropped into the sun-bleached sprawl where surfers, burnouts, and suburbanites collided, Tovar did the responsible, junior-college circuit—Golden West and Fullerton colleges, the polite conveyor belt of mediocrity—but the truth is he’d already been running his own education for years. By his teens he was a border hustler, smuggling fireworks out of Tijuana with the kind of nerve no textbook could teach.

Soon enough, those extracurricular activities were going to drag him into a new and legendary direction—the kind that starts with a boot on the gas and ends with sirens in the rearview. Where the border was a revolving door and authority was something to be toyed with.

Tovar’s first hit of punk came at Winterland in ’78, watching the Sex Pistols flame out in a blaze of piss and nihilism. But it was his kid sister, Bianca, who pulled back the curtain on what was happening closer to home. Cops were strangling SoCal shows in real time—raids, shutdowns, boots on kids’ necks—and the crackdown only made the bands louder. 

To a 20-year-old pirate with cash to burn and an appetite for trouble, that was enough. Punk was worth fronting. Worth pouring gas on until the scene caught fire.

“I saw the culture. I wanted to push it as far as I could,” Tovar said later in an interview with OC Weekly. “Expose it to as many people as possible. There were a lot of good ideas getting a lot of resistance. And I think we won.”

Tovar funneled the money back into the scene. Booking bands no one else would touch. Renting halls respectable promoters wouldn’t risk. Setting fire to his own fortune for the cause. 

Punk was the new sound. Weed was the currency. And with Tovar at the wheel, they were building a movement that would mutate into something nobody in that smoke-choked room could have ever imagined.

Zodiacs in the Dark

Gary never looked like a punk promoter. He looked like what he was: a hustler with a gambler’s grin and saltwater on his breath.

He didn’t begin as a kingpin. He began with fireworks—Roman candles smuggled past customs when he was a kid. If you can move rockets, why not reefer? Why not burlap sacks of fat buds hidden under cargo no one bothered to check? 

After all, courage comes from the belly. All else is desperation.

By the late ’70s, he was one of California’s biggest cannabis free-traders. Freighters in Asia. Hand-offs at sea. Fishing boats ferrying the goods closer to shore. Zodiacs racing through salty marine layer to unload on deserted stretches of coast. Cloak-and-dagger stuff. Something out of a Len Deighton Cold War novel, except the new enemies weren’t the Soviets—it was the DEA. 

Smuggling weed back then was all about faith. Faith in timing, in loyalty, silence. You trusted the ocean to hide you, and your crew to keep their goddamn mouths shut.

Coast Guard spotlights sweeping the water like state-run eyes of Sauron. Helicopters thundering overhead. Smugglers crouched on a beach, sand clinging to sweat, praying the Zodiacs had already melted into the scenery. You learned to live with paranoia, because paranoia kept you breathing.

And yet Tovar kept running loads, more for purpose than for profit. Instead of burying his cash in condos or gold watches, he poured it into punk.

In 1981, when most promoters wouldn’t touch hardcore for fear of cops, fistfights, or trashed venues, Tovar leaned in. Put down deposits on the punk scene. He flew in British acts like GBH and The Adicts, backed Black Flag and Circle Jerks, rented hostile halls like the Olympic Auditorium. 

He paid bands fair when others stiffed them. Punk bands didn’t care about the Top 40—they were after the new sound. And Tovar was the quiet backer with deep pockets who wanted to fund their wildest dreams. 

Goldenvoice—Tovar’s promotion outfit, named after a Thai strain he claimed “sounded like angels singing in a golden voice”—became the crooked backbone of SoCal punk. Stamped on flyers, whispered about in backrooms. 

On paper, Tovar lost millions. In practice, he bought a revolution.

Without his runs of Thai and Acapulco, there’s no TSOL and Shattered Faith at La Casa de la Raza. No Exploited and UK Subs at the Olympic. No Samhain and Necros tearing down the Stardust Ballroom. Nights that would have never made it past soundcheck.

Smoke was the receipt for every busted lip and burned dollar Tovar poured into punk.

Photo by Mauro Romero via Unsplash

The Bill Comes Due

It couldn’t last. Nothing gold does.

March ’91. Dawn. The DEA kicked his door in. Tovar’s double life snapped shut. It didn’t come as a surprise—the bootlegger circuit was already splintering—the war on drugs was at full tilt. Reagan’s mandatory minimums had crystallized the air everyone breathed. ‘Just Say No’ wallpapered over every school in the country, a moral branding iron for an entire generation.

Tovar had gotten too successful. Too visible. Too loud to ignore.

The bill came due.

He pled guilty to trafficking and spent seven years in federal prison. Seven years to replay the reels: fireworks as a teen, freighters in Asia, keeping punk alive one night at a time.

The Velvet Noose

The timing was especially cruel. Just as Goldenvoice was becoming legend—nights that left you bruised but smiling—Tovar lost it. The cuffs clicked, and he handed it over to Paul Tollett and Rick Van Santen.

They kept the name alive. But by the late ’90s, Goldenvoice—the weed-fueled carnival Tovar built—created something its younger self would’ve puked on: Coachella.

The corporate, desert bacchanal of VIP tents and $40 cocktails. From Thai Stick in a Hollywood pit to influencers posing in Indio. 

An evolution so cynical it could’ve been a joke.

At the Starwood, you risked a busted nose, maybe a knife fight. At Coachella, you risk sunburn and overpriced rosé. The grit has been scrubbed off, replaced by curated Instagram backdrops and brand activations. The kids once locked out of venues are now locked out by ticket prices.

Goldenvoice may be corporate now, but its roots are resin-soaked. Its name is written in the DNA of a crashing wave that was meant to break once it hit the California coast. 

At the core of America’s biggest festival runs a deep current of punk weed lore.

Photo by Joel Muniz via Unsplash

Blood, Smoke & Feedback

Like the plant, Tovar thrived on the margins. Like the plant, he built community where there was none. And like the plant, he was punished for it—caged, stamped a criminal—even as the scene he funded bled ragged into the mainstream.

Now cannabis comes sealed in child-proof plastic. Punk is nostalgia on Spotify, repackaged as background noise for Taco Bell commercials. Coachella is a corporate sandbox of wristbands and influencers elbowing for the best Heineken-sponsored selfie.

But scratch the glossy veneer and Tovar’s fingerprint is still there. You can hear it in the rumble of a hardcore reunion. See it in growers still chasing landrace purity. Smell it in the blunt passed around at the edge of a Turnstile pit. The spirit didn’t die, but it’s forever mutated.

And that’s the pattern. Outlaw culture gets mined, sanitized, sold back to the masses. Jazz clubs. Punk pits. Cannabis farms. The cycle doesn’t stop. The only question is who keeps the spirit alive when the money men move in.

That’s why Gary’s story matters. Not as trivia, but as proof that any culture worth a damn is born underground, sustained by those reckless enough to bankroll it against all odds.

For SoCal punk, weed was the blood.
Music, the drug.
Coachella’s the hangover.

The rest is just smoke.

This article is from an external, unpaid contributor. It does not represent High Times’ reporting and has not been edited for content or accuracy.



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I Worked a Day as a Budtender in Brooklyn: Here’s What I Learned

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The first thing I learned guest budtending in Brooklyn? Your feet hurt before your shift is halfway done. But the conversations make it worth it.

I spent the day behind the counter at By Any Other Name (BAON) in Clinton Hill to experience budtending from the inside, where product knowledge matters, but people matter more.

Photo by Matt Curry

Learning the menu is just the beginning. The real work happens on the floor: listening to people, asking the right questions, and guiding them to something that fits. At BAON, almost every customer was greeted by name, like walking into a neighborhood bodega instead of a dispensary.

BAON stands out because it carries micro-grow boutique products you rarely see in NYC.

Biggie, Bud, and Brooklyn Pride

The tight-knit Brooklyn community of Clinton Hill is where rap icon Biggie grew up. The street features a life-size mural of Biggie on the corner. The community honors his birthday every year with block party celebrations.

The owner of the dispensary,  Ted Crawford, is a Brooklyn native who is dedicated to the borough and the neighborhood. “Our dispensary uplifts the neighborhood and fits in like an important piece of a complicated puzzle,” says Ted.

Ted’s story is provocative; he grew up in nearby Bushwick and was arrested over 30 years ago for a marijuana-related offense, but didn’t do time. “I was lucky to have a lawyer who knew the parameters. He worked hard to help me,” says Ted Crawford, Owner, By Any Other Name. 

A businessman and entrepreneur, Ted Crawford also owns a restaurant in Harlem called Row House. He knows how to run a successful business. The dispensary opened less than a year ago with grit and determination, but Ted doesn’t speak about that like most owners who have been through the trauma, dealing with the Office of Cannabis Management (OCM). He is focused on the positive and living life with intention. 

Clinton Hill, Brooklyn, is bordered by Bedford Stuyvesant to the east and Fort Greene to the west. The area is alive with people and offers the quintessential NYC cool feeling that Manhattan used to have.

The name of the dispensary, By Any Other Name, evolved from a conversation the owner had with his team. It is a story within a story that has deep meaning about legalization, prohibition and reparation. “It’s the story of cannabis within the black community and the shifting of wealth. All the names that cannabis holds in its excellence, terrifying history, in its connectivity and in its healing potentials. We felt the name exuded that deep-rooted conversation,” says Ted Crawford. 

As my branded apron glistened under the starkness of the white, modern, sleek interior of the dispensary, I got back to work. The micro-grow products caught my eye. 

BAON proudly stocks real New York micro-grows you rarely see in corporate dispensaries:

  • Farm 2 Hand (Fyre brand) are legacy growers with a micro license in the Bronx. They previously owned a Port Morris Distillery, the first legal distillery in the Bronx since prohibition. Their newly launched cannabis brand features high-grade flower, zero trim and is kief-free. Only high-quality buds allowed!  
  • Sticky’s Weed Farm is an outdoor/greenhouse grow upstate NY that offers small batch flower and prerolls.
  • Felas is another legacy grow micro from the southern Westchester area that has excellent indoor flower and prerolls.

On the chocolate and sweet side, By Any Other Name offers a unique selection of sweet confessions. “If you’re looking for a full-on candy bar, I recommend the Soft Power Sweets bar. The brand sells a 100mg candy bar and it is packed with flavor and a great rolling build on the THC side. 

The Soft Power Sweets, Dulce De Leche candy bar, comes in a Super Power high-dose design. It’s crafted with slow-cooked, handmade vegan condensed coconut milk. “Every batch simmers for 4 hours before becoming a smooth and rich THC caramel. Covered in sixty-five percent ethically sourced chocolate and scored to offer single 10mg doses in a 100mg mini bar. This treat unlocks the high of luxury cannabis sweets,” says Site Manager, Tracy Shah.

If you’re looking for a true micro-dose chocolate, “The 1mg chocolate buttons from I Am Goodness offer a 100-piece bag of chocolate buttons, in milk and dark. They’re perfect for making chocolate chip cookies or homemade trail mix. The micro buttons allow you to create your own dose and are tailored to your recreational tolerance and therapeutic needs,” adds Tracy.

Being a budtender requires deep product knowledge, the ability to make conversation, and being able to read your customer. “You need a super flexible attitude. The rules and regulations are constantly evolving. It helps to have an extensive knowledge of cannabis, especially if you’re also the buyer, like me. As long as you’re not afraid to get your hands dirty, can multitask and tolerate long hours then you’re ready to be a budtender/manager,” says Tracy.

“And those that rushes my clutches/Get smoked like dutches from the master/Hate to blast you but I have to, you see I smoke a lot/You know how the weed go, unbelievable,” a classic Biggie quote that befits the dispensary, where plant medicine and healing are understood and where knowledge is passed to everyone who enters the store.

BAON has blended into the Brooklyn neighborhood. The dispensary is a well-crafted piece of a complicated puzzle that links cannabis culture to music, art and community. 

Photos courtesy of BAON



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