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Mississippi AG Says Intoxicating Hemp Products Are ‘Prohibited’ Under State Law
Jun 24, 2025
TG Branfalt
Ganjapreneur
In a letter to Mississippi state Rep. Lee Yancey (R), Mississippi Attorney
General Lynn Fitch (R) said intoxicating hemp-derived products are
“prohibited” under the state’s Controlled Substances Law. However, Fitch
declined to offer an “official opinion” on whether the products could be
possessed in the state due to federal law, which allows hemp cultivation.
“Except for products possessed in strict accordance with the provisions of
the Mississippi Medical Cannabis Act, the possession – with intent to sell,
barter, transfer, manufacture, distribute or dispense – of a product
derived from the hemp plant designed for human ingestion and/or consumption
that is not approved by the United States FDA is prohibited under
Mississippi’s Uniform Controlled Substances Law.” — Fitch in the letter
Yancey had asked Fitch for clarification on state law as it relates to the
sale of hemp-derived products “designed for human ingestion and/or
consumption” outside of the Mississippi medical cannabis program.
“Mississippi law does not specifically address the possession or sale of
products derived from the hemp plant designed for human ingestion and/or
consumption,” Fitch wrote. “However, as implied by your questions, the
Mississippi Medical Cannabis Act … allows for the sale and possession of
medical cannabis products, including edible cannabis products.”
Mississippi allows hemp cultivation, although, according to the state Department
of Agriculture and Commerce, “the necessary funding to implement the
program was not appropriated by the Mississippi Legislature” and the
federal Department of Agriculture is in charge of licensing hemp
cultivators.
Yancey had sponsored a bill to ban intoxicating hemp products during this
term’s session, but the legislation was never taken up by lawmakers and
died when the legislature adjourned in April.