CAPITAL CHAPTER IV U.S. Legal Landscape
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ACKRELL
CAPITAL CHAPTER IV U.S. Legal Landscape
of a single cultivation and dispensing enterprise. In other states, a licensed cultivator may be permitted
to sell to unaffiliated licensed dispensaries or delivery services, which then retail medical cannabis to
patients.
Each state has its own rules about whether medical cannabis activities may be engaged in for profit.
In states where caregivers and qualified patients collectively or cooperatively aggregate their cultivation
and distribution efforts, participants generally are allowed to charge amounts necessary to recover the
reasonable costs associated with those activities but may not operate for profit. In states that allow
licensed cannabis activities, such as cultivation and dispensing, the organizations engaged in those
activities generally may seek to earn a profit.
CBD/Limited Laws
From 2014 through 2017, a total of 19 U.S. states enacted CBD/limited laws that generally permit
possession of small amounts of low-THC/high-CBD cannabis concentrates for use in treating a few
serious medical conditions. Most of these laws limit qualifying medical conditions to severe forms of
epilepsy or seizure disorders, but some laws designate a moderately broader set of conditions.
Most CBD/limited laws allow CBD use by children. Many of these laws were enacted in the con-
text of high-profile stories about CBD treatments for children with severe seizure disorders, and the
laws have been given names like Carly’s Law (Alabama), Haleigh’s Hope Act (Georgia) and Julian’s Law
(South Carolina). Charlotte's Web is a low-THC/high-CBD cannabis strain named for Charlotte Figi,
a young Colorado girl whose parents treat her seizure condition with CBD oil. Her case was featured
in Dr. Sanjay Gupta’s popular CNN special, Weed.
In general, each CBD/limited law establishes a narrow legal framework for use of low-THC/
high-CBD cannabis concentrates. Certain CBD/limited laws designate only one or several producers
of permitted cannabis concentrates; in some cases, these producers include a state university or research
institution. Other CBD/limited laws establish no legal framework for the production or distribution of
permitted products and merely provide a narrow affirmative defense for state-law cannabis possession
and use charges.
Recreational Laws
In 2012, Colorado and Washington voters passed the first laws in the United States (and the world) to
permit the commercial production and sale of cannabis to adults for recreational and other uses. Alaska
and Oregon passed similar recreational laws in 2014. And in the November 2016 elections, four more
states—California, Maine, Massachusetts and Nevada—passed recreational laws. (Of the five recre-
ational laws included on November 2016 ballots, only Arizona’s law did not receive voter approval.)
State recreational laws permit adults aged 21 years or older to legally purchase and use cannabis
sold by state-licensed commercial businesses. There are no state residency requirements for adult con-
sumers, and out-of-state visitors with valid proof of age may legally purchase cannabis, giving rise to
“cannabis tourism” in states with extensive dispensary networks like Colorado, Oregon and Wash-
ington. Cannabis typically may not be consumed in public spaces or private establishments open to
the public, such as parks and restaurants. Recreational laws also generally permit adults to cultivate a
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