COLUMBUS, Ohio (Statehouse News Bureau) — A judge in Franklin County has for now blocked Gov. Mike DeWine’s short-term “intoxicating” hemp ban for products with psychoactive ingredients, such as delta-8 THC and THC-A.

By: Sarah Donaldson | Statehouse News Bureau
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (Statehouse News Bureau) — A judge in Franklin County has for now blocked Gov. Mike DeWine’s short-term “intoxicating” hemp ban for products with psychoactive ingredients, such as delta-8 THC and THC-A.

The advocacy organization the U.S. Hemp Roundtable is backing the plaintiffs. Jonathan Miller, U.S. Hemp Roundtable general counsel, said he sees DeWine action as both “wrongheaded” and “illegal.”“If the legal challenges are not successful or if the legislature doesn’t reverse this, it would have a devastating impact on the Ohio hemp industry,” Miller said.
DeWine signed an executive order that both seeks to redefine hemp, by excluding “intoxicating hemp” from the Ohio Revised Code’s definition of hemp, and declares an adulterated consumer product emergency. That emergency declaration gave retailers statewide until Oct. 14 to clear their shelves of any products fitting that definition.
“It is absolutely absurd that a 14-year-old, a 13-year-old can walk into a store and buy this stuff. It’s never what anybody intended,” DeWine said. “I don’t think you’ll find one legislator who will tell you that it was intended, so yeah, I went back to our lawyers.”
Since late 2023, DeWine has made it clear he wants legislators to regulate intoxicating hemp products. It has been mostly touch and go on how to handle the gray area the federal government created in 2018, when Congress removed cannabis products with less than 0.3 percent delta-9 THC from the definition of marijuana. Most products contain psychoactive ingredients that still induce a high, but are legal at any age.
In early 2024, however, he said he could not “do anything without action by the state legislature.”
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