Indiana governor gives stores 60 days to pull CBD oil
Published: Nov 28, 2017, 10:15 am • Updated: Nov 28, 2017, 10:34 am
By The Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS — Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb is directing state excise police to resume checking stores for marijuana-derived oils after the state’s attorney general declared them illegal with one limited exception.
Holcomb says in a statement Tuesday that excise police will “perform normal, periodic regulatory spot checks” of cannabidiol, or CBD, products. He says those checks will focus on products that contain THC, the psychoactive chemical in marijuana.
The Indianapolis Star reports stores have 60 days to pull the products from their shelves.
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The recent opinion from Attorney General Curtis Hill states that substances containing CBD are illegal to possess, make and sell in Indiana under state and federal law. The opinion said the exception is CBD products that can be used by people with epilepsy who are on a new state registry.
Information from: The Indianapolis Star
Topics: cannabidiol oil, cbd oil, Curtis Hill, epilepsy, Eric Holcomb, Indiana