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An Arizona judge rejected a legal request to block new restrictions on intoxicating hemp products. The Hemp Industry Trade Association of Arizona filed a lawsuit, arguing that the production and sale of THC-infused hemp products is legal. The judge denied the motion. People who sell intoxicating hemp products in Arizona could face criminal penalties. The attorney general clarified the changes and gave hemp businesses one month to adjust. Intoxicating THC products must be sold through licensed dispensaries. The hemp industry's legal challenges will remain.

Arizona Judge Rejects Bid to Block Hemp Product Crackdown

Apr 28, 2025

Graham Abbott

Ganjapreneur



An Arizona judge last week rejected a legal request to block new
restrictions from Attorney General Kris Mayes (D) on intoxicating hemp
products, AZ Central reports.

The Hemp Industry Trade Association of Arizona filed the lawsuit on April
21, arguing that the production and sale of THC-infused hemp products is
legal under state and federal law. The plaintiffs also argued that the
attorney general’s proposed changes would wipe out the industry, costing
jobs and ruining businesses. But Maricopa County Superior Court Judge
Randall Warner denied the motion for a restraining order last Thursay, the
day the new rules took effect.

According to an opinion issued by AG Mayes last year, people who sell
intoxicating hemp products in Arizona could face criminal penalties and
fines of up to $20,000 per item sold. The attorney general clarified the
changes in a follow-up opinion on March 24 and gave hemp businesses one
month to adjust to the new mandate.

“All THC-infused edible products cannot be sold in Arizona by an unlicensed
entity. Even if such products are legal under the Farm Bill of 2018,
federal law does not preempt Arizona’s more stringent State laws.” — Mayes,
in the follow-up opinion

AG spokesperson Richie Taylor said in the report, “the judge made the right
decision in denying the TRO. Arizona law is clear: intoxicating THC
products must be sold through licensed dispensaries, not convenience stores
or smoke shops.”

Sully Sullivan, executive director for the Hemp Industry Trade Association
of Arizona, told AZ Central, “We didn’t secure the temporary win today, but
the Court did something just as important: it opened the door for our
voices to be heard in full.”

While law enforcement can enact the crackdown immediately after the judge’s
ruling, the hemp industry’s legal challenges will remain.

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