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New Veterans-Led Marijuana Campaign Aims To Convince Republican Lawmakers To Support Reform
Sep 22, 2025
Kyle Jaeger
Marijuana Moment
Marijuana and veterans advocacy groups have launched a campaign to mobilize
military veterans to help convince Republican lawmakers to embrace embrace
federal cannabis reform.
The Last Prisoner Project (LPP) and Balanced Veterans Network (BVN)
announced the new effort on Monday to empower veterans to fight for access
to medical cannabis and raise attention about veterans who are currently
incarcerated over marijuana.
“This partnership will identify the impact of cannabis laws on our service
members, amplify their stories to key decision-makers—particularly
Republican members of Congress—and advocate for legislation that ensures
veterans and their health care providers have every option available to
treat service-related trauma effectively,” the groups said in a press
release.
The announcement briefly describes three veterans—Robert Deals, Deshawn
Reilly and Kristofer Fetter—who are actively serving time in prison due to
marijuana-related offenses.
“It is an insult to our veterans that our country would put them in a cage
for trying to treat the trauma they suffered while defending our freedoms,”
Jason Ortiz, director of strategic initiatives for LPP, said. “This
partnership is our effort to fight for their freedom, and we encourage
everyone who cares about our veterans to join us in this fight, put
pressure on lawmakers to release all veteran cannabis prisoners, and pass
legislation to no longer penalize them for using cannabis to treat the
wounds they endured fighting for us.”
Terry Ikey, board member of BVN, said veterans “use cannabis in place of
medications that are ineffective at addressing mental health issues that
are a result of their time in service.”
“With the Veteran suicide rate rising every day, it is imperative that we
give our vets and their healthcare providers any and all tools needed to
help our vets find balance in their lives,” they Ikey. “That starts with
the freedom to grow their own cannabis at home. If veterans had the right
to grow their own medicine, they could maintain a steady supply of what
works for them, without being forced to start the trial and error process
over and over again.”
To that point, federally funded research published last month on the
relationship between PTSD and cannabis use in veterans found that marijuana
is associated with milder PTSD symptoms and reduced negative affect—the
tendency to experience frequent or intense negative emotions.
“Congress has the power to change the laws hurting our veterans, and we
have the power to change Congress if they don’t,” Eric Jansen, government
affairs coordinator of BVN, said. “We are emboldened by our partnership
with the Last Prisoner Project to mobilize our members into an undeniable
force for change. Far too many members of Congress say they support our
vets, and with this new powerful partnership, we plan to demand they turn
those promises into action.”
Veterans interested in supporting the campaign with stories about their own
experiences medical cannabis and the criminal justice system are being
invited to fill out an online form.
Last month, the Senate approved large-scale spending legislation that
includes provisions to allow U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)
doctors to recommend medical marijuana to military veterans living in legal
states.
In past years, both the House and Senate have included provisions in their
respective MilConVA measures that would permit VA doctors to make the
medical cannabis recommendations, but they have never been enacted into law.
Because both chambers again adopted differing language this year, the
matter will once more be a topic of conversation in conference committee or
informal bicameral negotiations and, as such, could end up being left out
of the final package sent to the president this time, as has been the case
in the past.
Meanwhile, a GOP senator said last month he’s “confident” that, under the
Trump administration, lawmakers will help secure alternative treatment
options for veterans—including access to psychedelic medicine, as multiple
veterans have personally requested from him after disclosing they’ve
travelled abroad for the novel therapy.
*Photo courtesy of Chris Wallis // Side Pocket Images.*
The post New Veterans-Led Marijuana Campaign Aims To Convince Republican
Lawmakers To Support Reform appeared first on Marijuana Moment.













