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Legality battle over consumable hemp products in Mississippi in limbo

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The battle over consumable hemp products sold in certain places in Mississippi is now in limbo.In a recently released opinion, Attorney General Lynn Fitch (R-Miss.) said hemp products designed to be consumed are illegal in most cases.She said in order for them to be legal, they have to be sold through a licensed medical cannabis dispensary or approved by the Food and Drug Administration. The opinion came in response to a request from Rep. Lee Yancey (R-Miss.) over the product.Fitch said under state law, the answer is no unless they meet strict medical cannabis guidelines.

The battle over consumable hemp products sold in certain places in Mississippi is now in limbo.

In a recently released opinion, Attorney General Lynn Fitch (R-Miss.) said hemp products designed to be consumed are illegal in most cases.

She said in order for them to be legal, they have to be sold through a licensed medical cannabis dispensary or approved by the Food and Drug Administration.

The opinion came in response to a request from Rep. Lee Yancey (R-Miss.) over the product.

Fitch said under state law, the answer is no unless they meet strict medical cannabis guidelines.



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Mississippi Cannabis News

Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians moving toward recreational marijuana legalization

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It’s been three years since marijuana for medicinal use became legal in Mississippi. Now, a tribal group in the state is taking steps toward the legalization of recreational use on their lands.

Members of the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians voted earlier this month in favor of a referendum to enact cannabis reform, according to official results provided by the tribe. The ballot option came after multiple public hearings and information sessions on the matter.

The June 10 ballot included a simple question asking voters, “Do you support the Tribe developing legislation to decriminalize and regulate the possession, production, and distribution of marijuana on Tribal lands?”

Out of over 2,500 votes cast, roughly 55% of members gave their approval of the measure.

The vote does not mean that recreational use is immediate on the tribe’s lands in the eastern part of the state and a satellite community in Henning, Tenn., according to Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians Tribal Chief Cyrus Ben. He stated at a community meeting in May, per reporting by Mississippi Free Press, that “this vote does not automatically authorize or legalize marijuana on Choctaw tribal trust land.”

However, the affirmative vote does allow the 17-member Tribal Council to hire consultants for a feasibility study and authorize research on public health and potential regulations in regard to recreational marijuana.

Cyrus Ben has served as tribal chief of the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians since July 2019. (File, Photo courtesy of MBCI)

“…This does not mean that dime bags will start selling on our streets the next day,” the chief cautioned during a public meeting before the vote, Mississippi Free Press reported. “All this means is that [the Tribal Council] will conduct a study of feasibility to determine the best use of marijuana on our lands. This is the next step after this vote.”

The move from the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians comes as Native American groups across the country debate and, in some cases, enact their own laws on marijuana use. According to the Indigenous Cannabis Industry Association, more than a fourth of Indigenous communities in the continental U.S. is now involved with marijuana or hemp programs.

The Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians in North Carolina, a state where cannabis remains illegal for medicinal and recreational use, approved a legalization referendum in 2023 and began sales in 2024. In 2020, the Oglala Sioux Tribe of South Dakota became the first to legalize marijuana in a state where the plant’s use remained illegal, according to Marijuana Moment.

The Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians has more than 35,000 acres of land in Mississippi and Tennessee. The tribe uses it for various purposes, including residential communities, cultural preservation, and economic development. Three casinos are included in the latter, with the Tribal Council holding the power to decide whether recreational marijuana use would be permitted on gaming grounds by tribal and non-tribal members.

Other regulations, such as who can produce and sell marijuana, will also have to be decided on by the council.



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Do drinks infused with THC get children high? | News

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The concern about youth access and product safety is valid. Mississippi has no state laws regulating the sale of hemp-derived THC beverages — including no age restriction. But the post overstates how intoxicating these drinks are and ignores the wide variation in potency, labeling and effects. For more context, read the full fact-check below:

A south Mississippi convenience store owner recently posted a warning on social media claiming that new THC-infused drinks are hitting store shelves and could get children high.



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Consumable Hemp Products Illegal Without FDA Approval, Mississippi AG Says

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Despite Mississippi lawmakers’ failed attempt to ban intoxicating hemp products this legislative session, the state’s top legal adviser to government officials said those products are already prohibited in the Magnolia State.

State Attorney General Lynn Fitch issued an opinion on June 11 that Mississippi’s Uniform Controlled Substances Law forbids the sale of consumable products containing hemp derivatives that are not approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). 

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“Marijuana and THC are included on Mississippi’s Schedule I controlled substances list,” she wrote. 

Lynn said the lone exception is for products sold through licensed medical cannabis dispensaries that are regulated under the state’s Medical Cannabis Act that Republican Gov. Tate Reeves signed into law on Feb. 3, 2022—456 days after voters approved a medical cannabis initiative that the state’s Supreme Court overturned. Dispensary sales launched in January 2023.

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Fitch’s opinion was in response to Rep. Lee Yancey, R-Rankin, who sought clarity on the matter after his legislation to ban intoxicating hemp products, House Bill 1502, died on the calendar when the Mississippi Legislature adjourned on April 3.

While Fitch responded, she also said that her office cannot opine on questions of federal law.

“Because the cultivation of hemp in Mississippi is legalized, licensed, and controlled by federal law, a complete response to your request is outside the scope of an official opinion,” the attorney general wrote.

Under the 2018 Farm Bill, hemp was federally legalized and defined as a plant that contains no more than 0.3% delta-9 THC on a dry-weight basis during a pre-harvest field test; however, the federal law does not include provisions to regulate finished goods, such as delta-8 THC gummies, THCA vapes or other products containing cannabinoids derived or synthesized from compliant hemp plants.

These intoxicating hemp products are often sold in smoke and vape shops as well as convenience and grocery stores in states such as Mississippi, where regulations evade legislation.

In Mississippi, hemp is legally grown through federal licensure under the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Domestic Hemp Production Program. 

Although state lawmakers passed the Mississippi Hemp Cultivation Act in 2020 to legalize the state’s hemp cultivation program, the Legislature never appropriated necessary funding to implement the program under the law—meaning the only legal option to grow hemp is through the federal program—according to the Mississippi Department of Agriculture and Commerce.

As a result, hemp in Mississippi is defined by federal law: the 2018 Farm Bill.

Although Fitch wrote that the state’s Uniform Controlled Substances Law may prohibit the sale or possession of consumable hemp products that aren’t approved by the FDA, she offered a conflicting statement in her response.

“Mississippi law does not specifically address the possession or sale of products derived from the hemp plant designed for human ingestion and/or consumption,” the Mississippi attorney general wrote. “However, as implied by your questions, the Mississippi Medical Cannabis Act … allows for the sale and possession of medical cannabis products, including edible cannabis products.”

In the absence of legal clarity, Yancey, a member of the House Drug Policy Committee, sponsored the now-dead 2025 legislation that had aimed to ban intoxicating hemp products in Mississippi, with an exception for certain low-THC beverages to be sold to those 21 years and older. The legislation also intended to authorize the Mississippi State Department of Health to regulate CBD products.

While some hemp-derived product manufacturers have called on the FDA to regulate the production, marketing and sale of CBD, the federal agency has often kicked the can to Congress, requesting that federal lawmakers provide funding or take the lead themselves.

While Yancey’s 2025 legislation passed the Mississippi House in an 82-27 vote, the Senate passed an amended version of the bill in a 35-16 vote; however, the bill stalled in a conference committee and was left on the table amid public pushback, in part over the allowance for hemp-derived THC beverages.

Yancey, who spearheaded the state’s medical cannabis legalization bill three years ago, said the basis of his 2025 legislation was to protect children from accessing intoxicating hemp products, SuperTalk Mississippi Media reported.

“These

are already being sold in the gas stations and in the supermarkets, and it will become more and more rampant across our state,” Yancey told the news outlet in April. “We had a chance to stop this.”



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