Bill Increases Criminal Penalties for Butane Hash Oil
Bill passed state Senate committee on a 5 to 1 vote.
In the Assembly committee discussion, Rep. Jesse James (R- Altoona) repeatedly compared butane hash oil and similar products to methamphetamine. He pointed to the manufacturing process which, if done improperly, can be dangerous due to flammable components in the process. The bill’s penalties, which mirror proposed legislation around fentanyl production and distribution, were crafted by the West Central Drug Task Force, comprised of law enforcement representatives from six counties stretching from the Mississippi River to the middle of Wisconsin.
More than half of U.S. states have legalized cannabis, including states that border Wisconsin, as well as Canada. Republicans shot down attempts by Gov. Tony Evers to fully legalize cannabis in Wisconsin. Evers’ proposed framework could have brought an estimated $165 million in tax revenue, which he proposed putting into an $80 million community reinvestment fund. Meanwhile, local municipalities have moved to lower penalties around cannabis possession while the plant remains illegal. Cannabis has been decriminalized in Madison, and fines in Milwaukee for simple possession have dropped to not more than $1.
Senate moves to increase criminal penalties for butane hash oil was originally published by the Wisconsin Examiner.
I no longer smoke marijuana. I don’t use any recreational drugs. The last time I smoked marijuana was back in 1975 when it was more socially acceptable. Those were the days when President Bill Clinton and President Barack Obama smoked marijuana.
But this article reminds me of the time we had a party and I made marijuana brownies with a large amount of hashish added in for good measure. I was the hit of the party and people still talk about my brownies to this very day.