-
Australia says wheat crop set to plunge
-
Arnaldi outlasts Tiafoe in marathon that 'wasn't tennis, was something else'
-
Lebanon says Hezbollah accepted US proposal to stop attacks
-
NBA Magic hire Spurs assistant Sweeney as new head coach
-
Huge NFL deals send Garrett to Rams, Brown to Patriots
-
Trump admin agrees to temporarily freeze 'slush fund' for allies
-
Mexican police tear-gas teachers' protest 10 days before World Cup
-
Berrettini back in French Open quarters after injury 'darkness'
-
Sabalenka bests Osaka at French Open, Berrettini into quarters
-
Sabalenka overpowers Osaka to reach French Open quarter-finals
-
Pro-Trump lawyer, leftist senator launch Colombia runoff campaigns
-
EU reaches deal on 'return hubs' migration reform
-
Lebanon's US embassy says Hezbollah accepted US proposal to stop attacks
-
Florida sues OpenAI, CEO Altman over ChatGPT harm to minors
-
Macron announces 93 bn euros in 'Choose France' foreign investments
-
Joshua says 'only success' matters as Fury fight looms
-
UN Security Council to meet on Lebanon war as Israeli forces push into south
-
UN agency blocks Trump official's appointment over US arrears
-
Trump says Israel, Hezbollah agree to halt fighting
-
Monaco sack coach Pocognoli
-
Auger-Aliassime gallops past Tabilo and into last eight
-
Sabalenka to face Osaka, Berrettini into French Open quarters
-
AI giant Anthropic confidentially files for IPO
-
'Resilient' Berrettini powers into French Open last eight
-
Colombia right-winger accused of 'stealing' national jersey
-
Still in the game: Athletes who made comeback in their 40s
-
Iran truce on the rocks as Guards threaten 'new fronts'
-
New York Times publisher slams AI companies' 'brazen theft' from news outlets
-
Rodri says Man City future can wait until after World Cup
-
Villarreal appoint Inigo Perez after Rayo success
-
Word nerds have a weekend on the tiles at Thailand's Scrabble title
-
Cobolli stops thinking and quells Svajda fightback at French Open
-
Czech court orders German neo-Nazi provocateur's extradition
-
French Open happy with Sabalenka-Osaka in top slot, but men still have edge
-
Serena Williams announces return to tennis at Queen's Club
-
Serena Williams to return to tennis at Queen's Club
-
Polish qualifier Chwalinska continues dream Roland Garros run
-
'We need to act now': Race to develop Ebola vaccine heats up
-
Iran truce on the rocks as Israel presses into Lebanon
-
Fans furious at Travis Scott's 20-minute Istanbul debut set
-
Two Syrians deny civil war torture accusations in Austria trial
-
Oil prices jump as Iran suspends peace talks
-
India takes down giant Messi statue over safety concerns
-
South Africa World Cup squad depart for Mexico following visa delay
-
Nvidia PC chip hailed as 'game changer' in race for AI device
-
'Stop killing women': Kenyans protest femicide scourge
-
Sabalenka to face Osaka, Cobolli into French Open quarters
-
Kevin Keegan reveals stage four cancer diagnosis
-
Cobolli fights into French Open last eight against dogged Svajda
-
Kalinskaya battles into French Open quarter-finals
MMJ International Holdings Joins Landmark D.C. Circuit Challenge to DEA's Marijuana Rescheduling Order
WASHINGTON, DC / ACCESS Newswire / June 1, 2026 / MMJ International Holdings, MMJ BioPharma Cultivation, and MMJ BioPharma Labs, announced today that they have joined a Petition for Review filed in the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit challenging the Drug Enforcement Administration's marijuana rescheduling order. The petition seeks judicial review of DEA's April 2026 Final Order that moved FDA approved marijuana products and state licensed medical marijuana products to Schedule III while creating an expedited federal registration pathway for state medical marijuana license holders.

The appeal argues that the federal government has created a regulatory double standard that benefits state marijuana operators while disadvantaging companies that followed the federal pharmaceutical pathway.
"For more than seven years, MMJ followed every federal rule," said Duane Boise, President and CEO of MMJ International Holdings. "We pursued FDA Investigational New Drug applications, obtained Orphan Drug Designation, secured a DEA Schedule I laboratory registration, manufactured pharmaceutical soft-gel formulations, and invested millions of dollars developing cannabinoid medicines. Yet our cultivation application remains unresolved while DEA is now creating an expedited pathway for state operators."
According to the petition, MMJ has suffered competitive injury because the Final Order establishes an accelerated registration process for state medical marijuana licensees while federally compliant pharmaceutical developers continue waiting for regulatory action. The filing states that MMJ pursued the federal pharmaceutical pathway from inception, obtaining FDA INDs, Orphan Drug Designation, pharmaceutical formulations, DEA-inspected facilities, and botanical drug development programs under FDA guidance.
THE CENTRAL QUESTION
MMJ believes the case raises a fundamental question:
The petition challenges the legality of the DEA's Final Order on multiple grounds, including statutory authority, procedural violations, treaty obligations, constitutional concerns, and the creation of what petitioners describe as a novel regulatory framework never authorized by Congress.
MMJ emphasized that the greatest cost of regulatory delay has not been financial.
"The real victims are the patients," Boise continued. "Families affected by Huntington's disease and Multiple Sclerosis have waited years while federal agencies delayed decisions. Every year lost to bureaucracy is a year patients can never recover."
MMJ's pharmaceutical development program includes cannabinoid-based therapies under FDA oversight and an Orphan Drug Designation program for Huntington's disease. The company maintains that it chose the most rigorous scientific pathway available because patients deserve medicines supported by evidence, quality controls, and pharmaceutical manufacturing standards.
DEA UNDER INCREASING SCRUTINY
The filing also highlights MMJ's long-running dispute with DEA over its cultivation registration application and notes prior constitutional challenges involving the agency's administrative adjudication process. The petition specifically references DOJ's prior acknowledgment regarding constitutional concerns involving administrative law judge removal protections.
As the marijuana rescheduling debate moves forward, MMJ believes federal regulators must answer difficult questions regarding equal treatment, competitive fairness, treaty compliance, and the future of federally compliant pharmaceutical developers.
ABOUT MMJ INTERNATIONAL HOLDINGS
MMJ International Holdings, through its subsidiaries MMJ BioPharma Cultivation and MMJ BioPharma Labs, is developing pharmaceutical-grade cannabinoid medicines for Huntington's disease and Multiple Sclerosis through the FDA drug approval pathway. MMJ BioPharma Labs holds a DEA Schedule I analytical laboratory registration, and the company has pursued federal pharmaceutical development, FDA IND programs, and botanical drug research since 2018.
CONTACT:
Madison Hisey
[email protected]
203-231-8583
SOURCE: MMJ International Holdings
View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire
Th.Berger--AMWN