By Ben Adlin

Enormous joint descends on White House lawn. Activists frustrated with the Obama administration’s lack of action on cannabis reform made their complaints heard Saturday by sparking up on the president’s doorstep. Organized by DCMJ, the group that helped legalize adult use in Washington, D.C., the Reschedule 420 event drew more than a hundred attendees — including Leafly’s own Lisa Rough — who at 4:20 p.m. began smoking joints, puffing on vapes, and even doing dabs outside the White House. (They’ll be back April 16 for a cannabis seed giveaway.) Though public consumption is illegal in the nation’s capital, police didn’t make a single arrest at the event — though they did politely ask activists to put away a 51-foot-long inflatable joint. TV host Bill Maher inspired the action but didn’t attend the event himself, something organizers at DCMJ weren’t too happy about:

Hey thanks for inspiring us even if you did nothing at all to help promote a real protest, smoking on TV is legal btw.. @billmaher

— DCMJ (@DCMJ2014) April 2, 2016

Advocates call on Senate Judiciary Committee chair to actually chair Senate Judiciary Committee. The National Cannabis Industry Association on Monday called on Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) to hold committee hearings on the CARERS Act. The federal legislation would remove CBD from the Controlled Substances Act, recognize states’ rights to regulate medical cannabis, and clarify industry banking rules. A bipartisan group of senators introduced the bill more than a year ago, but it’s languished in committee as Grassley has refused to give it a hearing. Washington insiders say the senator’s stance could be changing, though, and the bill got a shot in the arm last month when former presidential candidate Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) announced his support. What do you say, Chuck? You could do a lot of good for a lot of people.

Branding firm to buy embroiled Southern California delivery service. Aquarius Cannabis announced late last week that it will acquire SpeedWeed, a Los Angeles area delivery service that boasts more than 25,000 medical marijuana patients and raked in more than $2.5 million in revenue last year, according to a press release. What the presser doesn’t mention is that SpeedWeed is being sued by officials in Los Angeles in an effort to stop deliveries in the city. The matter is ongoing, but a court decision last month doesn’t bode well: In a separate case, an appeals court ruled that all L.A. deliveries are illegal under a local ordinance known as Proposition D. It’s not yet clear how the lawsuit will proceed, but Aquarius’ announcement specifies that the company “will not assume any liabilities from the operation of SpeedWeed prior to closing.”

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To continue reading this story, visit our friend’s website (opens in a new window):: The Shake: White House Protest Draws a Crowd, SpeedWeed is Sold, and Now There’s a Hemptsy