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Mississippi Says Medical Marijuana Is Legal—Just Don't Talk About It
Mississippi Says Medical Marijuana Is Legal—Just Don't Talk About It

Yahoo

time01-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Mississippi Says Medical Marijuana Is Legal—Just Don't Talk About It

Small-business owner Clarence Cocroft budgeted for advertising when he launched his company in DeSoto County, Mississippi. He even purchased billboards. But when the time came to announce his presence, state regulators silenced him. Cocroft is prohibited from talking about his business on the radio or television or advertising in newspapers, the internet, or outdoors. He is only permitted to hang a sign on his property and have a website with basic information. The state is targeting Cocroft—who obtained all the proper business permits during a tedious startup process—because his industry is medical marijuana. Mississippi lawmakers legalized medical marijuana in 2022. But at the same time, they empowered the state Department of Health to control advertising. The extent of the ban was not immediately clear. The rules took shape as Cocroft worked to launch Tru Source Medical Cannabis, Mississippi's first black-owned medical marijuana dispensary. By the time he opened his doors, the speech police were ready to pounce. "I own this billboard," Cocroft said during a 2023 interview, pointing to one of his highway signs. "But I cannot advertise because it is a medical marijuana business." Normally, when pot dispensaries face discrimination, the tension is due to an ongoing power struggle between federal and state governments. This began in 1996, when California set its own pot policy in defiance of the federal Controlled Substances Act, and since then, 40 states have followed with marijuana laws of their own. The issue in Mississippi is different. Nobody in Washington, D.C., is meddling and federal agencies do not enforce against state-legal medical marijuana businesses. Mississippi is engineering its conflict entirely from within, claiming that medical marijuana is legal to sell but not advertise. This gamesmanship leaves Cocroft in limbo. He can run his business legally, but he cannot talk about it. "When you can't advertise, it's a disaster," Cocroft said. "They're setting you up for failure." Besides defying logic, the censorship is unconstitutional. The Supreme Court held in Central Hudson Gas & Electric Corporation v. Public Service Commission of New York that the First Amendment protects truthful advertising about legal products. Mississippi wants to argue that medical marijuana is legal under state law, while clinging to federal rules that make the product illegal. In other words, Mississippi wants to have its pot brownie and eat it, too. Cocroft challenged the absurdity in a First Amendment lawsuit in 2023, represented by our public interest law firm, the Institute for Justice. Despite Supreme Court precedent, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled against Cocroft in November 2024. Because marijuana is federally illegal, a three-judge panel held, "the state faces no constitutional obstacle to restricting commercial speech relating to unlawful transactions." Mississippi can defy Congress when it wants, and then turn around and hide behind Congress to silence people like Cocroft, singling them out for restrictions that other small-business owners do not face. "You will see billboards from casinos to gentlemen's clubs to whatever," Cocroft said. "This is the only industry they will not allow advertising." If the ruling stands, the discrimination will continue. But Cocroft is not done fighting. On March 21, 2025, he petitioned the Supreme Court to hear his case. His ultimate goal is to help patients who cannot find his shop if they do not know it exists. "Chemo patients, patients suffering from depression, patients that are suffering from [post-traumatic stress disorder], a lot of veterans, and patients with neurological or neuropathy pain," Cocroft said. "They have a story, and it hits home." Other states could also use clarity from a Supreme Court decision. As things stand, pot dispensaries cannot advertise on highway billboards in California. They cannot have online pop-up ads in Colorado, show images of cannabis plants in Connecticut, or pass out fliers in Maine. Minnesota even requires dispensaries to submit advertisements to the government for pre-approval. All Cocroft wants to do is speak truthfully about his legal business. Mississippi ought to let him. The post Mississippi Says Medical Marijuana Is Legal—Just Don't Talk About It appeared first on

Mississippi dispensary owner asks Supreme Court to hear case challenging ad ban
Mississippi dispensary owner asks Supreme Court to hear case challenging ad ban

Yahoo

time22-03-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Mississippi dispensary owner asks Supreme Court to hear case challenging ad ban

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — The owner of a medical marijuana dispensary in Olive Branch, Mississippi, is challenging the state's ban on advertisements for such businesses, and he's asking the Supreme Court to hear his case. Clarence Cocroft, owner of Tru Source Medical Cannabis, LLC, filed a petition with the United States Supreme Court on Friday. The Mississippi State Department of Health issued regulations that banned medical marijuana dispensaries from advertising and marketing in any media, including radio, television, newspapers, and highway signs. First black-owned medical dispensary opens in North MS Cocroft filed a complaint against the state's ban in November 2023. The complaint alleged that the ban violated the First Amendment and caused Cocroft's business to 'sustain significant harm.' A year later, in November 2024, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit upheld Mississippi's ban. Cocroft is now asking the Supreme Court to review the Fifth Circuit's opinion. 'By doing so, the Fifth Circuit's silence on the other factors sanctioned a generally impermissible government aim—restricting commercial speech for the purpose of manipulating consumers' beliefs and behaviors,' the petition states. Cocroft had reportedly planned to use four billboards he owns to advertise his business, which is the first Black-owned medical dispensary in North Mississippi. But, the state's ban prevents him from doing so. 'Because of these regulations, I cannot use my own billboards to advertise my own business or inform potential customers about Mississippi's medical marijuana program,' Cocroft said in a statement. 'Advertising is particularly important for my business because it is tucked away in an industrial park without any real foot or vehicle traffic.' 'Mississippi cannot simultaneously create an entire legal marketplace for an industry and then turn around and use an unenforced federal law to prevent those businesses from advertising their state-legal products,' Ari Bargill, an attorney with the Institute for Justice said. 'If a business is legal, then the business owner has a First Amendment right to speak truthfully about his or her business.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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