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The Oregon Department of Justice says it doesn't have enough evidence to prosecute managers who steered rare liquors to themselves.
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Oregon has put an indefinite pause on new marijuana licenses.
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Starting in January, companies that deliver alcoholic beverages in Oregon will be required to have a permit and drivers will need to undergo training.
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Oregon marijuana products that were previously recalled over a pathogenic mold will be approved for sale.
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Marijuana in Oregon can no longer be recalled over a pathogenic mold, until a court decides if the state’s zero-tolerance policy went too far.
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Gov. Tina Kotek has previously denied the claim that she fired former OLCC Director Steve Marks earlier this year at the behest of a controversial cannabis entrepreneur.
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Subpoenas show the U.S. Attorney's Office has demanded a wide range of documents from the state involving Fagan and the owners of the La Mota dispensary chain.
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The secretary of state says she made clear to staff in February that she could no longer be involved in the audit, due to an impending contract with a couple whose business practices have since come into question.
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The OLCC is hearing public testimony for and against the proposal, which would bring the liquor bottle surcharge in Oregon to $1.
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Oregon Senate Republicans are asking Gov. Tina Kotek to appoint a special prosecutor to investigate the scandal surrounding top executives and managers at the Oregon Liquor and Cannabis Commission, who diverted specialty bourbons away from public consumption for their own personal use.
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Rosenbaum is the second senior Oregon Liquor and Cannabis Commission official to resign in the wake of a rare-bourbon scandal. The move follows a fiery speech he made in a public meeting.
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Craig Prins has served as an internal watchdog within the Department of Corrections since 2016. He will take over an agency in flux after a recent scandal.