The Illinois Supreme Court ruled Thursday the smell of burnt cannabis alone is insufficient grounds for police officers to search a vehicle. The ruling stems from a 2020 traffic stop in Henry County.
Vernon G. Pettaway, 47, 200 block of Blackhawk Drive, Park Forest, is scheduled to appear in Cook County court at Maywood on ...
Pritzker's administration implemented "discretionary policies" that led to their troubles. A group of social equity cannabis ...
(AP) — An odor of burnt marijuana doesn't justify a search of a car without a warrant in Illinois ... are now a myriad of situations where cannabis can be used and possessed, and the smell ...
A lawsuit filed by seven Chicago-based companies said an expedited application for large companies was a “nail in the coffin ...
Can MariMed's $7.7M Illinois Cannabis Expansion Turn The Tide In A $496M Market? Here's Where To Buy Legal Weed: These States Get New Stores As Cannabis Legalization Looms Smell Of Cannabis Is Not ...
More than 100 people packed the lobby of the 250,000-square-foot cultivation center in Matteson Wednesday to celebrate the ...
A state judiciary that has the ability to make tough decisions that uphold civil rights requires an independence that may be ...
Illinois cannabis patients can now buy from small businesses, but unequal market access for small growers remains a concern. Despite progress in social equity, legislative efforts continue to push ...