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Colorado Governor Grants Mass Psilocybin Pardon Following Voters’ Approval Of Psychedelics Legalization At The Ballot

Published
6 hours agoon

The governor of Colorado has announced a first-ever round of mass pardons for people with psilocybin-related convictions.
Just about two weeks after Gov. Jared Polis (D) signed a bill into law empowering him and future governors to issue clemency for people who’ve committed psychedelics offenses, he announced during a speech at the Psychedelic Science 2025 conference on Wednesday that he’s exercising that authority.
The pardons he’s granting through executive order will provide relief to anyone with a state-level conviction for psilocybin and psilocyn possession.
“Colorado has been a national leader in breaking through outdated laws around cannabis, and now we are doing the same for natural medicine,” Polis said in a press release. “This action eliminates past state-level convictions for psilocybin and psilocin possession that would be legal today. With these pardons, we are fulfilling the will of Colorado voters and moving away from ineffective drug policy and encouraging local municipalities to follow suit.”
At the conference, the governor stressed that, while his executive order covers state-level convictions, the major of people with psychedelics-related records were prosecuted at the local level, so he urged people to reach out to their city council representatives and mayors and ask them to pursue similar clemency actions.
“This is an important step forward, of course, for the individuals who will now have this cleared from their record—but also to really acknowledge the error in public policy that led to their conviction, creating a more just system to break down barriers and help them move on with their lives,” he said. “Maybe they want to go on to higher education or get a sensitive job that requires a criminal background check, and they will now be able to do that because, of course, they have not violated anything that is currently a law of Colorado.”
The executive order states: “Pursuant to the authority granted to me by SB 25-297, I am granting full and unconditional pardons for State convictions of possession of psilocybin and psilocin for those 21 years old or older at the time of the offense because possession of psilocybin and psilocin is no longer illegal in the State of Colorado and it should not be held against people since it is not a crime.”
In addition to granting the clemency, the order also calls on the Department of Public Safety, through the Colorado Bureau of Investigation, to develop a process to indicate on criminal background checks that these individuals’ convictions have been pardoned.”
Shortly after signing the legislation that now allows him to grant the pardons, Polis said the reform represents another step “towards a fairer future.” He’s advocated for the policy change since the state legalized certain entheogenic substances in 2022.
“Governor Polis is showing exactly the kind of courage and compassion that we hope to see from all governors across the country by using his executive authority to right the wrongs of prohibition and calling on Colorado municipalities to do the same,” Jason Ortiz, director of strategic initiatives for the Last Prisoner Project (LPP) told Marijuana Moment.
“I look forward to working with his office to support and empower local municipalities to carry the torch of freedom forward until there is no one burdened by a criminal history for actions that are now generating tax revenue across the state of Colorado,” he said.
The psychedelics clemency move comes several years after Polis issued mass pardons for people with prior marijuana convictions.
The recently enacted psychedelics legislation from Sen. Matt Ball (D) and Rep. Lisa Feret (D) authorizes governors to grant clemency to people with convictions for low-level possession of substances such as psilocybin, ibogaine and DMT that have since been legalized.
It will also require the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE), Department of Revenue (DOR) and Department of Regulatory Agencies (DORA) to “collect information and data related to the use of natural medicine and natural medicine products.”
That must include data on law enforcement activities, adverse health events, consumer protection claims and behavioral impacts related to psychedelics.
Prior to passage by the Senate, a committee amendment removed a government appropriation to pay for data collection and tracking, replacing a reference to “ongoing appropriations” with “appropriations or gifts, grants, or donations.” Ball said at the time that lawmakers have a letter of intent from the Psychedelic Science Funders Collaborative—a nonprofit that supports advancing psychedelic therapy—to fund the program for the entirety of its five-year duration.
The bill earmarks $208,240 in those funds for the governor’s office of information technology. “To implement this act, the office may use this appropriation to provide information technology services for the department of public health and environment,” the text says.
The legislation further amends rules around licensing and ownership of psychedelic healing centers. For example, it removes a requirement for fingerprint background checks for owners and employees of licensed facilities, making it so they would only be subject to a name-based criminal background check.
It additionally “requires the state licensing authority to adopt rules related to product labels for regulated natural medicine and regulated natural medicine products and permits the state licensing authority to adopt rules regarding the types of regulated natural medicine products that can be manufactured.”
The proposal overall earned support from an array of advocates, including psychedelic medicine proponents as well as groups more skeptical of legalization. Public commenters at a hearing seemed to agree that the bill’s data collection provisions would help observers both inside and outside Colorado better understand the outcomes around regulated psychedelics.
Late last month, Polis touted the fact that Colorado’s legal psychedelics program is “fully launched” now that regulators have issued licenses for each part of the psilocybin supply chain.
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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.
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Earlier this session, the governor signed into law a bill that would allow a form of psilocybin to be prescribed as a medication if the federal government authorizes its use.
While Colorado already legalized psilocybin and several other psychedelics for adults 21 and older through the voter-approved ballot initiative, the newly enacted reform will make it so drugs containing an isolated crystalized version synthesized from psilocybin can become available under physician prescription.
Polis signed a bill to create the regulatory framework for legal psychedelics in 2023.
Separately in Colorado, a bill that would have limited THC in marijuana and outlawed a variety of psilocybin products died following the lead sponsor’s move to withdraw the legislation.
Minnesota Officials Award State’s First Marijuana Business License

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
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Trump’s VA Head Visits Psychedelics Research Center, Reiterating ‘Promise’ To Explore Benefits For Military Veterans

Published
46 minutes agoon
June 18, 2025
The head of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) visited a facility conducting research on psychedelics this week, reiterating that it’s his “promise” to advance research into the therapeutic potential of the substances—even if that might take certain policy changes within the department and with congressional support.
In a video shared on X on Tuesday, VA Secretary Doug Collins talked about his commitment to pursuing clinical trials into substances such as MDMA—standing alongside Rachel Yehuda, the director of mental health at VA’s James J. Peters Veterans Affairs Medical Center who has overseen and advocated for psychedelics research.
“I told you all along that we are looking at psychedelics. We’re looking at anything to help our veterans,” Collins said, while stressing that he acknowledges “there’s no silver bullet for the things we have for trauma and our stress and the incidences of childhood.”
“These are all things that come out in our veterans as they come back from war zones, but also just in everyday life. But you know, sitting here with Rachel and the doctors here, I have found that there’s some things that are working,” the secretary said. “I promised you that we’re going to look into this, and we’re making changes to make it even better so we can make it more available.”
Visited the VA Bronx Health Care System today to have a look at some of the groundbreaking research they are doing regarding potential psychedelic treatments for Veterans. Excellent work! pic.twitter.com/VlbJHH44rA
— VA Secretary Doug Collins (@SecVetAffairs) June 17, 2025
“It’s going to take some change in the VA. It’s going to take some changes in Congress. But it’s a thing that I have said we want to do because we want to take care of veterans,” Collins said, noting that the room they filmed the video in is one of the facilities where MDMA clinical trials are currently underway.
“These are things we’re going to continue. I promise you, we’re going to do it,” he said, telling Yehuda to “keep doing what you’re doing because it is meaningful to our veterans, and I want to thank you.”
Yehuda shared the secretary’s post and said she was pleased to meet Collins and “show what we’ve built at [VA] for our veterans.”
“We’re excited about the expansion of our [Parsons Research Center for Psychedelic Healing] at the VA and the two new studies that have just begun here with MDMA and psilocybin,” she said.
Collins’s visit to the psychedelics research center comes about a month after the VA secretary met with a military veteran who’s become an advocate for psilocybin access to discuss the therapeutic potential of psychedelic medicine for the veteran community.
Collins also briefly raised the issue in a Cabinet meeting with President Donald Trump in April.
The secretary also disclosed in April that he had an “eye-opening” talk with U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. about the therapeutic potential of psychedelic medicine. And Collins said he’s open to the idea of having the government provide vouchers to cover the costs of psychedelic therapy for veterans who receive services outside of VA as Congress considers pathways for access.
During a recent Senate committee hearing, he separately reiterated his commitment to exploring the efficacy of psychedelic therapy to address serious mental health conditions that commonly afflict military veterans.
Meanwhile last month, bipartisan congressional lawmakers asked the VA head to meet with them to discuss ways to provide access to psychedelic medicine for military veterans.
In a letter sent to Collins, Reps. Lou Correa (D-CA) and Jack Bergman (R-MI)—co-chairs of the Congressional Psychedelic Advancing Therapies (PATH) Caucus—said they were “encouraged by your recent remarks about the importance of pursuing research into psychedelic treatments and other alternative treatments to improve Veterans’ care.”
Correa and Bergman separately introduced a bill in April to provide $30 million in funding annually to establish psychedelics-focused “centers for excellence” at VA facilities, where veterans could receive novel treatment involving substances like psilocybin, MDMA and ibogaine.
Bergman has also expressed optimism about the prospects of advancing psychedelics reform under Trump, arguing that the administration’s efforts to cut spending and the federal workforce will give agencies “spines” to tackle such complex issues.
—
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.
—
In December, VA separately announced that it’s providing $1.5 million in funding to study the efficacy of MDMA-assisted therapy for veterans with PTSD and alcohol use disorder (AUD).
Last year, VA’s Yehuda also touted an initial study the agency funded that produced “stunning and robust results” from its first-ever clinical trial into MDMA therapy.
In January, former VA Under Secretary for Health Shereef Elnahal said that it was “very encouraging” that Trump’s pick to have Kennedy lead HHS has supported psychedelics reform. And he hoped to work with him on the issue if he stayed on for the next administration, but that didn’t pan out.
Photo elements courtesy of carlosemmaskype and Apollo.

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
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Lawmakers Could Reschedule Marijuana With ‘Greater Speed And Flexibility’ Than Administration Officials, Congressional Researchers Say

Published
2 hours agoon
June 18, 2025
Amid a stalled marijuana rescheduling process that’s carried over from the last presidential administration, congressional researchers are reiterating that lawmakers could enact the reform themselves with “greater speed and flexibility” if they so choose, while potentially avoiding judicial challenges.
In an “In Focus” brief published by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) last week, analysts provided an overview of the different mechanisms through which scheduling actions can be implemented, noting the limitations of the process that the Biden administration initiated—and that the Trump administration has since inherited—to move cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III of the Controlled Substances Act (CSA).
“There are two ways in which substances can be scheduled under the CSA: Congress can schedule substances by enacting legislation, or the Attorney General (in conjunction with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, or HHS) can schedule substances via an administrative process laid out in the CSA,” CRS said.
For this report, which is an update to an earlier analysis CRS put out last year, researchers detailed various instances where Congress has stepped in and made a scheduling decision—such as the federal legalization of hemp under the 2018 Farm Bill.
“Congress placed numerous substances in Schedules I through V when it enacted the CSA in 1970,” it says. “Since the CSA’s enactment, most subsequent scheduling changes have been made by DEA via the rulemaking process, but Congress has at times enacted legislation to schedule controlled substances or change the status of existing controlled substances.”
“There are several reasons why Congress might decide to schedule or reschedule substances via legislation,” it says. “For instance, compared to administrative scheduling, legislative scheduling may offer greater speed and flexibility.”
“Administrative scheduling under the CSA proceeds via formal rulemaking, which generally takes months or years to complete. In making scheduling decisions, DEA is required by statute to make certain findings with respect to each substance’s potential for abuse and accepted medical use,” it continues. “DEA scheduling orders (other than temporary scheduling orders) are subject to judicial review, including consideration of whether the agency properly applied the relevant statutory standards.”
To that point, it did take 11 months for HHS under the Biden administration to complete its review into cannabis and make an initial rescheduling recommendation. DEA then completed a separate review before the Justice Department formally proposed moving marijuana to Schedule III—but even then, there have been months of delay in the administrative hearing process to potentially finalize the rule.
Congress, on the other hand, could reschedule or deschedule marijuana more quickly and with a lower threat of a judicial challenge, CRS said.
“Congress is not bound by the CSA’s substantive or procedural requirements,” the report says. “This means that it can schedule a substance immediately, regardless of whether the substance meets the statutory criteria. While scheduling legislation may also be challenged in court, the scope of judicial review of legislation is typically more limited than judicial review of regulations.”
It also says legislative action “may be the only way to permanently schedule large classes of substances” such as fentanyl-related substances, given the intensive statutory requirements imposed on DEA under the CSA.
“Relatedly, the CSA provides DEA with limited options for regulating controlled substances,” CRS said. “The CSA established Schedules I-V, with each schedule carrying a defined set of regulatory controls and penalties for unauthorized activities. If DEA decides to control a substance under the CSA, it must place the substance in one of the existing schedules.”
“The agency has asserted some authority to tailor controls to specific substances, but it cannot create new schedules or implement regulations or exceptions from control that are not authorized under the CSA. If Congress wishes to regulate a controlled substance in a way that does not fit within the existing CSA framework, or allow DEA to do so, it must enact legislation.”
Additionally, the report notes that while DEA is bound to consider certain international treaty obligations when it comes to drug scheduling, those same commitments “do not prevent Congress from exercising its constitutional authority to enact new laws, even when doing so might cause the United States to violate its treaty obligations.”
Meanwhile, last month a Senate committee advanced the confirmation of Terrance Cole to become the administrator of DEA amid the ongoing review of a marijuana rescheduling proposal that he’s refused to commit to enacting.
Cole—who has previously voiced concerns about the dangers of marijuana and linked its use to higher suicide risk among youth—said he would “give the matter careful consideration after consulting with appropriate personnel within the Drug Enforcement Administration, familiarizing myself with the current status of the regulatory process, and reviewing all relevant information.”
However, during an in-person hearing before the Judiciary Committee in April, he 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.
“I’m not familiar exactly where we are, but I know the process has been delayed numerous times—and it’s time to move forward,” he said at the time. “I need to understand more where [agencies] are and look at the science behind it and listen to the experts and really understand where they are in the process.”
Cole also said he feels it’s appropriate to form a “working group” to look at the federal-state marijuana law disconnect in order to “stay ahead of it.”
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.
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Trump’s Pollster Says Texas Hemp Ban Bill Faces ‘Bipartisan Opposition’ From Voters As Governor Nears Deadline To Act

Published
3 hours agoon
June 18, 2025
Texas Democratic and Republican voters are unified in their opposition to a bill on the governor’s desk that would ban consumable hemp products with any trace of THC, according to a new poll from a GOP pollster affiliated with President Donald Trump.
As Gov. Greg Abbott (R) weighs the controversial proposal—which advocates and stakeholders say would effectively decimate the state’s hemp industry—the poll from the firm Fabrizio, Lee & Associates found the measure is opposed across party lines. A majority of Democrats (80 percent) and independents (66 percent), as well as a plurality of Republicans (44 percent) said they don’t want the governor to sign it.
“When given a head-to-head choice, 7-in-10 Texas voters say they want hemp-derived consumable THC to remain legal in Texas with strict regulations like age restrictions and warning labels, while only 16 percent want it to be banned outright,” the polling memo says. “Republicans want hemp to remain legal by a substantial 59 percent-23 percent margin, with even bigger shares of Independents and Democrats choosing remain legal with regulations over an outright ban.”
In addition to the 59 percent of GOP voters who want hemp to stay legal in a separate question, 83 percent of Democrats and 73 percent of independents said the same.
There was notably high awareness of the bill among voters, with 52 percent of Texans saying they’ve seen, read or heard about the hemp ban proposal.
Asked whether their understanding of the legislation made them “more or less favorable toward the Texas State Legislature,” 57 percent said it left them feeling less favorable, compared to just 6 percent who said more favorable.
“Texas voters across party lines want hemp to remain legal and clearly oppose Governor Abbott signing the bill banning hemp into law,” the polling firm said. “A narrow majority have already heard about the ban passing the state house, and it’s hurting the legislature’s image and could cost them in the ballot box. The Governor can avoid the same fate and get credit across the political spectrum by vetoing this unpopular bill.”
The survey involved interviews with 600 registered Texas voters from May 28-29, with a +/-4 percentage point margin of error.
Earlier this year, Fabrizio, Lee & Associates also polled Americans on a series of broader marijuana policy issues. Notably, it found that a majority of Republicans back cannabis rescheduling—and, notably, they’re even more supportive of allowing states to legalize marijuana without federal interference compared to the average voter.
Tony Fabrizio, the polling firm’s principal, served as pollster for Trump’s 2016 and 2024 presidential campaigns.
On the Texas hemp issue, the governor still hasn’t made a decision on the bill.
“I’ll tell you this: Listen, there are meaningful positions and concerns on both sides of the issue, and I’ll look into all of those and evaluate all of those,” he told reporters during a Q & A session on Monday following a bill signing ceremony for an unrelated measure.
That largely echoes comments Abbott made earlier this month, when he said SB 3 “is one of literally more than a thousand bills on my desk—all of which need my careful consideration and evaluation.”
Also this month, hemp advocates and stakeholders delivered more than 100,000 petition signatures asking Abbott to veto the measure. Critics of the bill have said the industry—which employs an estimated 53,000 people—would be effectively eliminated if the measure becomes law.
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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.
—
Texas lawmakers legalized the sale of consumable hemp in 2019, following enactment of the 2018 federal Farm Bill that Trump signed, which legalized the plant nationwide. That’s led to an explosion of products—including edibles, drinks, vape products and cured flower—sold by an estimated 8,000 retailers.
Military veterans advocates, including Texas Veterans of Foreign Wars, have also called on the governor to veto the hemp ban, saying it “would cause irreversible harm to communities across the state.”
Farmers have also said the prohibition would devastate a key sector of the state’s agriculture industry.
Meanwhile, a recent poll commissioned the Texas Hemp Business Council (THBC) found that Texas Republican primary voters oppose the proposal to ban hemp products containing THC.
Read the polling memo on the Texas hemp ban below:
Photo courtesy of Brendan Cleak.

Author: mscannabiz.com
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