HOUSTON (AP) — The district attorney in the most populous Texas county has announced a new program in which law enforcement agencies will not arrest individuals caught with four ounces or less of marijuana.
Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg announced in Houston on Thursday that her office will offer those possessing misdemeanor amounts of marijuana an opportunity to participate in the program starting March 1.
Individuals won’t be jailed or have to appear in court, but they will have 90 days to complete a four-hour decision-making class. Those completing the program won’t face charges.
The mayors and police chief in Houston, the county seat and nation’s fourth-most populous city, say they support the program.
But Brett Ligon, neighboring Montgomery County’s district attorney, criticized the program and said his suburban county won’t “become a sanctuary for dope smokers.”
Cannabis advocates hailed the DEA’s decision to reclassify marijuana under federal drugs laws, although many…
The governor of Georgia signed a series of bills aimed at bolstering the state’s agriculture…
For those seeking enlightenment through meditation, psilocybin might do the trick.
On her latest album, the megastar is more open about substance abuse than ever before.
Ohio's recreational market remains in limbo, for now.
The once prominent cannabis company has now entered receivership, and its assets and operations will…