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Time to get medical cannabis to Alabama patients, doctors say

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Time to get medical cannabis to Alabama patients, doctors say


Amanda Taylor of Cullman moved out west because the medical marijuana products that doctors said could help her multiple sclerosis and other health problems were not available in Alabama.

Taylor later returned to advocate for medical cannabis in her home state. She keeps a photo from the day she joined Gov. Kay Ivey and others at a ceremony to sign the bill that made medical marijuana legal in Alabama.

But three years after that triumphant moment, Taylor and other patients who need medical marijuana still cannot get it in Alabama.

Lawsuits and other problems have kept the state from issuing the business licenses needed to make and sell the products authorized by the 2021 law.

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On Wednesday, Taylor joined several doctors, a former lawmaker, and a former Alabama mayor to call for an end to the legal stalemate.

“Businessmen and politicians are bickering over spoils while we suffer,” Taylor said. “There are people who are sick, suffering, and dying, and no one cares about the patients. It is time for these lawsuits to stop.”

The Alabama Medical Cannabis Commission, set up to regulate the fully intrastate industry, first tried to issue licenses a year ago, but lawsuits and problems with the AMCC’s procedures have kept products from becoming available.

The AMCC has issued licenses to cultivators, processors, transporters, and a state testing lab. But licenses for integrated companies and dispensaries remain on hold, blocked by lawsuits pending in the Montgomery County Circuit Court and the Alabama Court of Civil Appeals.

AMCC officials had said they hoped products would be available this year, but the litigation makes that uncertain.

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A group called the Patients Coalition for Medical Cannabis held the event Wednesday in Montgomery and organizers said they will hold similar events in Mobile, Birmingham, Huntsville, and Dothan.

Dr. Corey Hebert, a pediatrician from New Orleans and medical professor at Tulane and LSU, said he has seen the how medical cannabis has helped patients in Louisiana. He gave the example of a condition called infantile spasms.

“I’ve watched a mother give their child medical cannabis and the seizures stop for the first time,” Hebert said. “And this was before this mother could get this medicine legally in Louisiana. So, she had to risk going to jail to drive to Colorado so that her child could not have seizures.”

Hebert said medical cannabis is an important treatment for PTSD and can help veterans who suffer from that condition.

Dr. Kirk Kinard, an osteopathic doctor who is president of the Pause Pain & Wellness, based in Oxford, Miss., said the company’s clinics have about 20,000 certified medical cannabis patients in Mississippi.

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“We’re getting great feedback,” Kinard said. “My mission for Alabama is to bring our brand here so that you can scale up as quick as you can once everybody is through fighting over the legalities of it. It’s time for that to stop and go forward with something.”

Kinard, a member of the Mississippi State Board of Medical Licensure, said the first two years of medical cannabis in that state have shown that the products are safe. He said medical cannabis is an important option for treating chronic pain as an alternative to opioids.

“It doesn’t solve all the world’s problems,” Kinard said. “It solves a few very well, though. And the consequences of trying it and it failing are literally moving on to the next option.”

Dr. Marshall Walker of Mobile, whose practice focuses on pain management, said Alabama patients need the option of medical marijuana products like patients have in many other states.(Mike Cason/mcason@al.com)

Dr. Marshall Walker of Mobile, whose practice focuses on pain management, said his patients are eager to have the same options as those in other states.

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“Cannabis is one of those things that quite frankly I need to fill the gap in pain control for people in Alabama,” Walker said. “My patients bring it up all the time. When are we going to get it, doc? When is it going to happen? Is it ever going to happen? Should I move?”

Walker said a medical cannabis product called Rick Simpson oil helped his mother, an esophageal cancer survivor, deal with the effects of radiation and chemotherapy.

“The Alabama Legislature did what we asked them to do,” Walker said. “Our elected officials delivered what we needed them to deliver. What we now need are the injunctions against us using the law that we have to go away, so we can do the good work like Dr. Kinard is doing in Mississippi and Dr. Hebert is doing in Louisiana.

“Why do our people have to suffer needlessly when on the other side of an imaginary line they don’t have to? It’s not fair to our people.”

Former state Rep. Mike Ball of Madison County, who championed the medical cannabis bill and earlier bills on CBD, and former Mobile Mayor Mike Dow also spoke at Wednesday’s event.

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Former state Rep. Mike Ball

Former state Rep. Mike Ball of Madison County performs a song at Wednesday’s event advocating for the availability of medical cannabis in Alabama. Ball was the House sponsor of the bill that made medical marijuana legal in the state.(Mike Cason/mcason@al.com)

Taylor, a cosmetologist, said she asked her doctors years ago if medical cannabis could provide some relief for her multiple medical problems, which she said include MS, gastroparesis, type I diabetes, and PTSD. They told her it could but gave little hope that it would ever be available in Alabama.

“I packed up everything that I could fit in my car,” Taylor said. “And I literally became a medical refugee. And I went out west.”

Taylor, who said her weight had dropped below 90 pounds, moved first to California, then to Flagstaff, Ariz., where she landed a job in a medical marijuana dispensary. Taylor said she grew stronger from the medicine and documented the experiences of other patients that she talked to. She hiked in the mountains and recorded her thoughts in journals, and prayed about what she should do next in her life.

Taylor said God gave her a vision that she should return to Alabama and speak to the Legislature and a medical cannabis study commission that she should go door-to-door speaking to lawmakers. She said helped change some hard-core “no” votes to help pass the legislation. She keeps a framed photo of the day the bill passed the House. Ball was the House sponsor of the legislation, which was sponsored by Sen. Tim Melson, R-Florence.

Taylor said it is time to put the legislation to work for the people it was supposed to help.

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“Who are these lawsuits serving?” Taylor said. “They’re not serving the patient. I’ve been suffering for three years. If it was all about me, I would have stayed in Arizona, where I had the keys to the kingdom. Literally had my own set of keys to the dispensary.”

“Where is the compassion that was promised? I see no compassion. I see greed.”

The law allows companies to make gummies, tablets, capsules, tinctures, patches, oils, and other forms of medical marijuana products. Patients who receive a medical cannabis card will be able to buy the products at licensed dispensaries.

The products can be used to treat a wide range of conditions, including chronic pain, weight loss and nausea from cancer, depression, panic disorder, epilepsy, muscle spasms caused by disease or spinal cord injuries, PTSD, and others.



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Husband, 19, fatally shot wife, 24, himself at Alabama hospital moments after welcoming their first child

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Husband, 19, fatally shot wife, 24, himself at Alabama hospital moments after welcoming their first child


A husband fatally shot his wife before turning the gun on himself at an Alabama hospital just moments after they welcomed their first child on Sunday.

Kynath Terry Jr., 19, gunned down 24-year-old Precious Johnson before fatally shooting himself inside the Baptist Health Brookwood Hospital around 9:30 p.m. Sunday night, WTVM 13 reported.

Johnson delivered a healthy baby just before she was murdered. It’s not immediately clear if the baby was present during the shooting, but police said that Terry and Johnson were the only ones injured.

Kynath Terry Jr., 19, shot 24-year-old Precious Johnson at an Alabama hospital after she gave birth to their child. WVTM

Terry’s mother told the outlet that the couple were having some marital issues leading up to Johnson’s due date, but nothing that made her fear her son would become violent.

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She told the outlet that Terry completed Army National Guard training before tying the knot with Johnson.

She noted that Johnson didn’t want Terry’s side of the family at the hospital for her child’s birth, but it’s unclear if anyone from the mother-to-be’s own family was there.

The hospital was plunged into a lockdown “out of an abundance of caution” while police investigated reports of a shooting. It wasn’t lifted until hours later when they determined there was “no active threat to patients, team members or the public,” the outlet reported.

The Homewood Police Department described the tragedy as “an apparent murder-suicide and is domestic in nature.”

Terry completed Army National Guard training before marrying Johnson. WVTM
The shooting sent Brookwood Baptist Medical Center into an hours-long lockdown. Google Maps

Danne Howard, the president of the Alabama Hospital Association, told the outlet that the chilling attack “was an isolated incident” unlike anything she’d encountered during her three decades working in the state.

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Howard said, in the wake of the tragedy, the Baptist Health Brookwood Hospital would undergo a security overhaul implementing “lessons learned” from a mandated after-action report.

Just three months ago, in a town six miles outside of Homewood, a beloved sports reporter was fatally shot by her husband before taking his own life. Their 3-year-old son, who was unharmed, led his grandfather to his parents’ bodies.



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Air Force base security tightens, AL reacts after attacks in Iran

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Air Force base security tightens, AL reacts after attacks in Iran


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The United States and Israel-led attacks on Iran are having an impact in Central Alabama.

The military actions that began Saturday targets the military forces of Iran and the nation’s ability to build nuclear weapons.

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In Montgomery, Maxwell Air Force Base and Gunter Annex have stepped up security so that all entry points will have a 100 percent ID check, the bases said on social media. The Trusted Traveler Program is suspended, which allowed Department of Defense identification holders to vouch for passengers.

Visitors without base access will have to go through the visitor center to get a pass.

Central Alabama residents react to the Iran attacks

For Travis Jackson of Montgomery, the attacks bring back memories, bad memories. He served one tour in Iraq from 2007-2008 with the U.S. Army. He attained the rank of sergeant before leaving the service and has worked the last 10 years as a community activist and diversity, equality and inclusion coordinator.

“I had a flashback of being overseas again,” he said when he first heard news of the attack. “The first thing I thought of was corporate greed. Of yet again seeing what has transpired throughout the years of any war overseas.”

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He feels the attacks are a mistake.

“It’s going to be detrimental to the economy, notably with the increase in oil prices,” he said.

Removing the current regime in Iran and establishing a more western friendly country could improve hopes for a more stable Middle East, said Amy Stephens of Elmore County.

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“I don’t know if there will ever be peace there,” Stephens said. “But Iran has been the causing trouble over there for almost 50 years.”

Ray Roberts of Prattville served in Operation Desert Shield/Storm in 1990 and 1991 after Iraq invaded Kuwait. He served in an ordinance company with the Alabama Army National Guard. He was a sergeant when he left the service and now works as a draftsman at a Montgomery manufacturing plant.

“It wasn’t a surprise,” Roberts said of the attacks. “President Trump had said they were coming. When he says something like that, he means it. I am glad we are working with Israel so it’s not just the United States. I wonder if Europe and some of the other Gulf nations will join the attacks.”

Contact Montgomery Advertiser reporter Marty Roney at mroney@gannett.com. To support his work, please subscribe to the Montgomery Advertiser.

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Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey receives Boy Scouts’ Circle of Honor

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Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey receives Boy Scouts’ Circle of Honor


Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey was honored for her lifelong dedication to youth and community service during the 12th annual Black Warrior Council Boy Scouts of America Circle of Honor awards luncheon.

The ceremony, which was held Feb. 27 at the Embassy Suites hotel in downtown Tuscaloosa, serves as a fundraiser for the council’s scouting program.

The Circle of Honor award is presented to people in west central Alabama whose livelihood and actions reflect the same values of the Black Warrior Boy Scouts. Recipients have also shown advocacy for youth and leadership in the community.

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Past recipients of the award include Terry Saban, Nick Saban, former U.S. Sen. Richard Shelby, scientist and philanthropist Thomas Joiner, pharmacist and retailer James I. Harrison Jr., civic leader Mary Ann Phelps and more.

Cathy Randall, a Tuscaloosa businesswoman, educator and philanthropist, presented Ivey with the award. Randall was inducted into the Circle of Honor in 2025 along with her late husband, Pettus.

Ivey said she was grateful to receive the honor by the Black Warrior Council and highlighted the importance of public service.

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“I’m proud to have dedicated my life to public service, there’s no more noble calling than to uplift and empower lives,” said Ivey during the Feb. 27 ceremony.

Ivey thanked the scouting organizations, including the Black Warrior Council for its contributions to educational opportunities, economic development, and public safety.

“In particular, I’m proud of the work done by our Scouting organizations like the Black Warrior Council, who lay a foundation for successful future in both our young people and our state, thank you for all you do to build a stronger Alabama by changing lives and preparing our future leaders,” said Ivey, a native of Camden in Wilcox County.

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Ivey is wrapping up her second term as governor after a long career spent primarily in government.

After graduating from Auburn University in 1967, Ivey worked as a high school teacher and a bank officer. She served as reading clerk for the Alabama House of Representatives under then-Speaker Joseph C. McCorquodale and she served as assistant director at the Alabama Development Office.

In 2002, Ivey was elected to the first of two terms as Alabama’s treasurer and in 2010, she was elected to the first of two terms as lieutenant governor. On April 10, 2017, Ivey was sworn in as Alabama’s 54th governor after the resignation of Robert Bentley. She filled out the rest of Bentley’s term before winning the gubernatorial election in 2018 and she was re-elected in 2022.

She will leave office at the end of this year.

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She is the first Republican woman to serve as Alabama’s governor but she’s the second woman to hold the state’s top executive office. Tuscaloosa County native Lurleen B. Wallace, a Democrat, became Alabama’s first female governor in 1966.

Circle of Honor luncheon raises nearly $200,000

Also during the ceremony, retired DCH Health System administrator Sammy Watson, who served as the event’s emcee, announced that the council had raised $197,000 through the luncheon that day.

Proceeds from the lunch will be used to expand Boy Scouts programs, making them available to over 3,000 young people in west central Alabama.

The Boy Scouts of America is the nation’s leading outdoor education and character development program. The mission of the Boy Scouts of America is to prepare young people to make ethical and moral choices over their lifetimes by instilling in them the values of the Scout Oath and Law.

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Reach Jasmine Hollie at JHollie@usatodayco.com.  To support her work, please subscribe to The Tuscaloosa News.   



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