Arkansas attorney general approves wording of marijuana ballot proposal

Attorney General Leslie Rutledge is shown in this file photo.
Attorney General Leslie Rutledge is shown in this file photo.

LITTLE ROCK — Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge has approved the wording of a proposal to legalize recreational and medical marijuana, allowing supporters to begin gathering signatures to put the measure on the November ballot.

Rutledge on Monday certified the proposed constitutional amendment by Mary Berry that would legalize the cultivation, production, distribution, sale and possession of marijuana. Berry must now gather nearly 85,000 signatures from registered voters to put the proposal on the ballot.

Berry's proposal also calls for releasing anyone serving prison, parole or probation for state marijuana offenses and expunging their conviction records. The measure also proposes levying an additional 5 percent excise tax on recreational marijuana sales but no state taxes on medical marijuana sales.

Read Tuesday's Arkansas Democrat-Gazette for full details.

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