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THIS SUSPECT, JUST GIVE THEM A CALL. A WE ARE JUST DAYS AWAY FROM A NEW STATE LAW TAKING EFFECT THAT WOULD PUT STRICT REGULATIONS ON THE SALE OF PRODUCTS CONTAINING HEMP DERIVED THC. AND WE’RE LEARNING THAT STATE INVESTIGATORS ARE ALREADY ON THE MOVE, RAIDING SEVERAL CBD SPECIALTY STORES AND VAPE SHOPS. WVTM 13 BRYCE OSELEN IS JOINING US LIVE THIS MORNING. BRYCE. WHERE DO THESE RAIDS HAPPEN AND WHY? GOOD MORNING. CARLA MAGDALA. OFFICIALS WITH ARLEY SAY THESE RAIDS HAPPENED IN CLANTON TROY ENTERPRISE AND WETUMPKA. AND IT ALL WENT DOWN ON MONDAY. OFFICIALS SAY SEARCH WARRANTS WERE CARRIED OUT AT STORES. INVESTIGATORS SAY WERE VIOLATING CURRENT LONG STANDING MARIJUANA LAWS. ALEA SAYS THEY SEIZED LARGE AMOUNTS OF MARIJUANA AND DRUG PARAPHERNALIA. THE RAIDS COME A WEEK BEFORE ALABAMA’S HOUSE BILL 445 GOES INTO EFFECT. STARTING JULY 1ST. THE ALABAMA ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL BOARD WILL BEGIN REGULATING PRODUCTS THAT INCLUDE DELTA EIGHT, DELTA NINE, AND DELTA TEN. THE BILL WILL BAN CERTAIN PRODUCTS, SPECIFICALLY ONES YOU CAN SMOKE. YOU WILL NOT BE ABLE TO BUY STUFF LIKE HEMP, CIGARETTES, CIGARS, VAPES, FLOWERS OR BUDS. BUT YOU CAN BUY EDIBLES AND DRINKS LIMITED TO TEN MILLIGRAMS OF THC PER SERVING. THE PRODUCTS DO HAVE TO MEET CERTAIN REQUIREMENTS FOR IT TO BE LEGALLY SOLD. FOR EXAMPLE, PRODUCTS NEED TO HAVE CHILD RESISTANT PACKAGING AND MUST SHOW HOW MUCH THC IS IN IT. WHILE ADVOCATES OF THE BILL SAY THEIR MAIN GOAL IS TO PROTECT CHILDREN FROM HEMP PRODUCTS, OPPONENTS SAY IT WILL UNDO YEARS OF CANNABIS REFORM AND EFFECTIVELY DESTROY THE HEMP INDUSTRY IN ALABAMA. THE WAY THAT MODEL LOOKS, NOBODY CAN STAY IN BUSINESS. NOBODY’S GOING TO BE ABLE TO PAY FOR STAFF, PAY FOR ALL THE EQUIPMENT YOU NEED, AND. RENT ON SINGLE SERVING GUMMIES AND SINGLE SERVING DRINKS. I MEAN, WITH NO CONSUMPTION, IT’S IT REALLY HANDCUFFS. THE WHOLE HEMP INDUSTRY. ON MONDAY, BIRMINGHAM MAYOR RANDALL WOODFIN POSTED ON FACEBOOK, CALLING THE BILL A BACKWARDS POLICY THAT WOULD FORCE HUNDREDS OF BUSINESSES ACROSS ALABAMA TO BE SHUT DOWN. MAYOR WOODFIN ALSO PRAISED TEXAS GOVERNOR GREG ABBOTT, WHO VETOED A SIMILAR BILL SUNDAY, WHICH WOULD HAVE BANNED THC PRODUCTS ACROSS TEXAS, SAYING GOVERNOR IVEY SHOULD HAVE FOLLOWED SUIT. AND ALEA AND THE STATE ATTORNEY GENERAL’S OFFICE PLAN TO HOST A PRESS CONFERENCE FRIDAY TO ELABORATE ON THESE RAIDS. INFORMATION ON THESE RAIDS AND THE BILL CAN BE FOUND ON OUR WEBSITE. WVTM 13 LIVE IN AVON

ALEA raids businesses ahead of hemp regulation law taking effect

Updated: 5:28 AM CDT Jun 25, 2025

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Video: WVTM 13 First Warning ForecastJust days before House Bill 445, a law that provides strict regulations on hemp-derived THC products, takes effect, state investigators are already on the move, raiding several CBD specialty stores and vape shops.The Alabama Law Enforcement Agency says the raids happened in Clanton, Enterprise, Troy and Wetumpka.ALEA spokesperson Capt. Jeremy Burkett says the search warrants were carried out at stores investigators say were violating current, long-standing marijuana laws and seized large amounts of marijuana and drug paraphernalia. Starting July 1, the Alabama Alcoholic Beverage Control Board will begin regulating products that include delta-8, delta-9 and delta-10.While advocates of the bill say their main goal is to protect children from hemp products, opponents say it will undo years of cannabis reform.”The way that model looks, nobody can stay in business,” said Ben Richards, who owns Avondale Apothecary. “Nobody’s going to be able to pay for staff, pay for all the equipment you need and rent on single-serving gummies, and single-serving drinks, I mean, with no consumption. It really handcuffs the whole hemp industry.”You will not be able to buy items like hemp cigarettes, cigars, vapes, flowers or buds, but you can buy edibles and drinks limited to 10 milligrams of THC per serving.Birmingham Mayor Randall Woodfin wrote a post on Facebook criticizing HB 445, saying, “Under this bill, a product that is legally purchased today will become a felony offense next week – while simple marijuana possession remains a misdemeanor. That’s not justice. That’s backward policy.”Woodfin also praised Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, who vetoed a similar bill Sunday that would have banned THC products across Texas, saying Gov. Kay Ivey should have followed suit. The ALEA and the Alabama attorney general’s office plan to hold a press conference on June 27 to provide more details on the raids.

Video: WVTM 13 First Warning Forecast

Just days before House Bill 445, a law that provides strict regulations on hemp-derived THC products, takes effect, state investigators are already on the move, raiding several CBD specialty stores and vape shops.

The Alabama Law Enforcement Agency says the raids happened in Clanton, Enterprise, Troy and Wetumpka.

ALEA spokesperson Capt. Jeremy Burkett says the search warrants were carried out at stores investigators say were violating current, long-standing marijuana laws and seized large amounts of marijuana and drug paraphernalia.

Starting July 1, the Alabama Alcoholic Beverage Control Board will begin regulating products that include delta-8, delta-9 and delta-10.

While advocates of the bill say their main goal is to protect children from hemp products, opponents say it will undo years of cannabis reform.

“The way that model looks, nobody can stay in business,” said Ben Richards, who owns Avondale Apothecary. “Nobody’s going to be able to pay for staff, pay for all the equipment you need and rent on single-serving gummies, and single-serving drinks, I mean, with no consumption. It really handcuffs the whole hemp industry.”

You will not be able to buy items like hemp cigarettes, cigars, vapes, flowers or buds, but you can buy edibles and drinks limited to 10 milligrams of THC per serving.

Birmingham Mayor Randall Woodfin wrote a post on Facebook criticizing HB 445, saying, “Under this bill, a product that is legally purchased today will become a felony offense next week – while simple marijuana possession remains a misdemeanor. That’s not justice. That’s backward policy.”

Woodfin also praised Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, who vetoed a similar bill Sunday that would have banned THC products across Texas, saying Gov. Kay Ivey should have followed suit.

The ALEA and the Alabama attorney general’s office plan to hold a press conference on June 27 to provide more details on the raids.

“}]] Opponents say the new law will “Destroy the hemp industry in Alabama.”  Read More  

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