A federal judge in Kentucky has ordered a Laurel County sheriff to return hemp products and derivatives that were seized from a pair of stores. The judge found that the store owner is likely to succeed on his claims that they were unlawfully taken.
In an order filed last week, U.S. District Judge Claria Horn Boom said Joseph Bingham most likely has federal and state law on his side and his products were lawful, according to law360. She said Sheriff John Root must return what was seized in the February raid and is blocked from seizing similar products in the future.
According to the suit, Bingham operates two CBD stores and on and Feb. 25, Root and others from the Laurel County Sheriff’s Department raided those businesses and seized products containing delta-8 THC without a warrant.
While Root argued the products were in plain sight, Bingham alleged many of the products were in a back store room. There is also a dispute as to whether an employee at one of the stores consented to the search and seizure, according to the suit.
In the order, Judge Boom noted that the 2018 Farm Bill exempts hemp and its derivatives from the definition of cannabis that is listed in Schedule I of the Controlled Substances Act, and the Farm Bill specifically excludes THC in hemp and its derivatives, with courts finding that this depends on the delta-9 THC concentration.