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Arsenal will start Premier League title defence against Coventry
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European robotics start-ups go up against Chinese heavyweights
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'Alter-Ego': An Italian hospital's little robot carer
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Japan's men told to clean at home, not just the World Cup
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French court confirms Moroccan football star Hakimi will stand trial for rape
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Deadly Philippines quake turns seabed into shore
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S. Korean leader says he told Trump sanctions on North are 'ineffective'
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Indonesia to capture last-known wild Bornean rhino for IVF
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No vaccine, conflict, mistrust: Ebola's return to DR Congo
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USA, Australia eye World Cup knockout rounds, Brazil in action
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AI museum brings sights, sounds and smells of the rainforest
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Iran to lodge complaint with FIFA over World Cup restrictions
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New Zealand minister defends fishers after two orcas killed in net
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Mexico into World Cup last 32, Canada celebrate historic win
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Seoul record leads most Asian markets higher, crude extends losses
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Co-hosts Mexico first team into World Cup knockout rounds
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Burnham wins key UK poll, paving way for bid to challenge PM Starmer
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Erasmus under 'no illusions' as tough Springboks season kicks off
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'Pico' Lopes -- Cape Verde defender's journey from Ireland to World Cup
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100 Colombian guerrillas disarm in deal with leftist government
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'Pretty special': captains eye Super Rugby glory in clash of top seeds
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Football 'ambassador' and fan favorite: a duck becomes a star in Mexico
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Ivory Coast's Diomande living World Cup dream, dealing with tragedy
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Slipper out of retirement for Wallabies' Nations Championship campaign
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Australia seek 'respect' from US amid World Cup 'layup' row
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Canada romp to first World Cup win, Switzerland thump Bosnia
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Gabriel tells Brazil to turn the page against Haiti at World Cup
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Horror injury overshadows Canada's first World Cup win
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Cuba adopts historic package of free-market reforms
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InterContinental Hotels Group PLC Announces Transaction in Own Shares - June 19
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US faces tough path to new Iran nuclear deal
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Good US Open shots not good enough for 2-over Scheffler
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Cuba unveils historic package of free-market reforms
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Subs send Swiss to World Cup rout of Bosnia-Herzegovina
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Stokes set for England return in New Zealand finale - reports
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McIlroy pleased with reduced green speeds in US Open winds
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US stocks resume upward climb as dollar advances again after Fed outlook
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June 29th DEA Hearing: The Marijuana Industry That Stole the Word "Medical" Is Now Choking on It
WASHINGTON, DC / ACCESS Newswire / June 17, 2026 / MMJ International Holdings, Inc. (MMJIH), together with its subsidiaries MMJ BioPharma Cultivation, Inc. and MMJ BioPharma Labs, Inc. (collectively, "MMJ"), applied to participate as an aggrieved interested party in the expedited Drug Enforcement Administration hearing commencing June 29, 2026, in Arlington, Virginia, under Docket No. DEA-1362 and Attorney General Order No. 6754-2026.
MMJ says the hearing will force a reckoning the state cannabis industry has spent a decade dodging: a registry card is not a clinical finding, a budtender is not a pharmacist, and a dispensary is not a pharmacy.

"The state marijuana industry stole the word 'medical' and never paid for it," said Duane Boise, President and CEO of MMJ International Holdings. "The FDA does not recognize a $50 pre-roll or a strain-specific tincture as medicine, and it shouldn't. It recognizes Epidiolex, Marinol, and Syndros - products that ran the full gauntlet of Phase I, II, and III trials, with defined pharmacokinetics and documented drug interactions. MMJ has spent more than eight years and substantial capital building exactly that: an active IND program, an FDA Orphan Drug Designation for Huntington's disease, and a DEA-registered analytical laboratory. We did the work the word 'medical' actually requires. The state-licensed industry did not, and AG Order No. 6754-2026 rewards it for skipping every bit of it."
Therapeutic Consumerism Wearing a White Coat
MMJ's position is blunt: state health departments approve access, not efficacy. When a state lists "chronic pain" or "anxiety" as a qualifying condition, that is a sociological decision dressed up as a medical one. There is no large-scale, randomized, placebo-controlled evidence behind the overwhelming majority of products sold under state medical marijuana programs - only variable-potency botanical extracts with strain profiles that shift from harvest to harvest, sold to patients told they are receiving medicine.
"This is therapeutic consumerism wearing a white coat," Boise said. "It is the same linguistic fraud the hemp industry got caught running, except the marijuana industry is committing it with a prescription pad instead of a gas station shelf. Calling an unstandardized plant product 'medicine' without a single clinical trial, dosing standard, or FDA approval behind it isn't an industry - it's a liability the federal government has decided not to look at yet."
MMJ argues AG Order No. 6754-2026 imports this fiction directly into federal law, granting state licensed operators the practical benefits of Schedule III status without requiring a single IND, a single clinical trial, or the manufacturing and diversion controls the Controlled Substances Act demands - the same controls MMJ has spent eight years and substantial capital building, while its own federal applications sit unresolved.
The Legal Exposure Behind the Rule
MMJ's hearing participation will draw on the Department of Justice's February 27, 2025, formal concession - made in MMJ BioPharma Cultivation Inc. v. Bondi (D.R.I., No. 1:24-cv-127) - that the removal protections afforded DEA administrative law judges under 5 U.S.C. § 7521 are unconstitutional. Read together with Axon Enterprise, Inc. v. FTC, 598 U.S. 175 (2023), MMJ argues this concession guts the structural legitimacy of the tribunal hearing the case and supports a stay of the proceeding.
MMJ is also a petitioner in the consolidated D.C. Circuit cases challenging the rescheduling order (Nos. 26-1106, 26-1130, and 26-1136), which raise statutory, treaty, and constitutional objections to AG Order No. 6754-2026, including arguments under the major questions doctrine and the Administrative Procedure Act.
Get Real or Get Out
"MMJ is not anti-marijuana. MMJ is anti-bad-science," Boise said. "Cannabinoids have real therapeutic potential - that's the only reason this company exists. What we will not accept is an industry that calls itself medical to get tax advantages and legal cover while refusing to do a single thing medicine actually requires: prove it works, prove the dose, prove it's safe. The hemp industry died because it chose profit over proof. The marijuana industry is writing the same suicide note right now, just with better packaging and higher taxes. The federal government built a real pathway. MMJ took it. Everyone else needs to get real or get out."
About MMJ International Holdings, Inc.
MMJ International Holdings, Inc., through its subsidiaries MMJ BioPharma Cultivation, Inc. and MMJ BioPharma Labs, Inc., is a pharmaceutical cannabinoid development company pursuing FDA botanical drug development and DEA controlled substance registration exclusively through federal regulatory pathways. MMJ holds an FDA Orphan Drug Designation for Huntington's disease, maintains active Investigational New Drug applications, and operates a DEA Schedule I - registered analytical laboratory.
CONTACT:
Madison Hisey
[email protected]
203-231-8583
Forward-Looking Statements
This release contains forward-looking statements regarding pending administrative and judicial proceedings, regulatory applications, and anticipated outcomes. Such statements are subject to risks and uncertainties, including the outcome of agency adjudication and ongoing litigation, and actual results may differ materially. MMJ undertakes no obligation to update these statements except as required by law.
SOURCE: MMJ International Holdings
View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire
M.Thompson--AMWN