Supreme Court will hear case claiming CBD product got trucker fired

travel2024-04-30 11:57:3642826

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court agreed Monday to hear an appeal from a CBD hemp oil maker fighting a lawsuit from a truck driver who says he got fired after using a product falsely advertised as being free from marijuana’s active ingredient.

Douglas Horn says he took the product to help with chronic shoulder and back pain he had after a serious accident. The company said it contained CBD, a generally legal compound that is widely sold as a dietary supplement and included in personal-care products, but not THC, which gives marijuana its high, Horn said in court documents.

After a failed routine drug test got him fired, Horn says he confirmed with a lab that the product did have THC. He sued the Vista, California, company under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, among other claims, alleging the THC-free marketing amounted to fraud.

Address of this article:http://burundi.27smiles.com/news-59e199870.html

Popular

Arizona rancher accused of fatal shooting will not be retried, prosecutors say

Medicare can pay for obesity drugs like Wegovy in certain heart patients

Online posts erroneously tie Senate minority leader’s late sister

Psychologists fear rule changes will make it even harder to get help

Tesla, Domino's Pizza rise; AMC Entertainment, SoFi Technologies fall, Monday, 4/29/2024

Medicare can pay for obesity drugs like Wegovy in certain heart patients

Astronomers find vast underground ocean under Saturn's Death Star

US measles cases are up in 2024. What's driving the increase?

LINKS