Maryland
Maryland Government’s Psychedelics Task Force Begins Work On Recommendations Due To Lawmakers Next Year
A newly formed psychedelics task force in Maryland held its initial meetings this month, beginning work on what will eventually become a report to lawmakers on how to reform the state’s laws on substances such as psilocybin, DMT and mescaline.
The Task Force on Responsible Use of Natural Psychedelic Substances was formed following Gov. Wes Moore’s (D) signing of a pair of bills into law in May of this year. The 17-person body, overseen by the Maryland Cannabis Administration (MCA), is charged with studying how to ensure “broad, equitable and affordable access to psychedelic substances” in the state.
The group will specifically consider policies around psilocybin, psilocin, dimethyltryptamine (DMT) and non-peyote-derived mescaline, though the legislation that created the body also gives members discretion to put more psychedelics under review as they see fit.
Members of the task force are expected to examine and make recommendations on issues such as “permitting requirements, including requirements regarding education and safety,” “access to treatment and regulated support” and “production of natural psychedelic substances.”
At the group’s first meeting, chair Andrew Coop, a professor and associate dean at the University of Maryland School of Pharmacy, told members their work is “critically important for the state and for citizens of the state.”
“Maryland is indeed a leader in this area,” he said, “and we need to make sure that we continue as a leader in this area and we do it correctly to ensure that every single person in Maryland benefits from this outcome that we get.”
Much of the conversation during the first two meetings consisted of introductions and initial planning. At the first, on November 7, members introduced themselves voted to authorize Coop to move forward with outreach to MCA about hosting a series of public listening sessions.
“The timeline for our report is this summer,” Coop told members, “so we do have a tight timeline to get this work together.”
At the second meeting, Coop laid out a plan to split members into four committees—(1) decriminalization and social justice, (2) education and public health, (3) compounds and substances and (4) intergovernmental research—calling them “four broad areas that were intended to start the conversation.”
The chair added that he plans to send out a survey for members to provide feedback and indicate which of the committees they’d like to serve on. “We do need feedback from all of you on these activities,” he said.
In the meantime, Coop said he’s been working with MCA officials to nail down the group’s timeline.
One member of the task force, psychotherapist David Selleh, proposed modifications to the four planned committees, suggesting they instead be: (1) substances, (2) models of access, (3) public education and legislature support and (4) regulations and governance. He presented a graphic depicting the issues and deliverables that each of those committees would take on.
Coop replied that intends to stick with his original committee structure idea when sending out the survey, but he emphasized that he was open to input on possible changes.
The group’s next meeting is expected to be December 5. Its recommendations will be due to the governor and legislature by July 31, 2025, though authorization for the task force doesn’t expire until the end of 2026.
For his part, Coop said he’s most passionate about ensuring education and “accessibility for all to these medications.”
“It needs to be responsible use,” he said, “and you can only have responsible use if you have educated use.”
Among the appointees is Nishant Shah, a county health director and substance use disorder consultant for state, is the designated representative on the panel for the Maryland Department of Health.
“I imagine my role more to be what do we as a state agency need to prepare for, think about, elevate in terms of issues to advise the legislature and the governor’s office on specific topics,” Shah said during his introduction, such as regulatory oversight, licensing, risks, safety and equity of access.”
Shah said he’s excited to “listen and learn and then share that with the department so that you guys have a partner in the Maryland Department of Health and Behavioral Health Administration when you guys are making recommendations.”
The law that created the task force includes provisions tasking the body with looking into other psychedelics issues, such as expunging prior convictions and releasing people incarcerated for psychedelics-related offenses, along with a mandate to make recommendations on potential civil penalties for “nonviolent infractions involving the planting, cultivating, purchasing, transporting, distributing, or possessing of or other engagement with natural psychedelic substances.”
Sen. Brian J. Feldman (D), who sponsored the legislation to create the task force and was appointed as a member by the Senate president, said at the body’s first meeting that he expects lawmakers will use the task force’s report to inform new psychedelics legislation, which would be considered in the 2026 legislative session.
“What we’re shooting for is a bill to come in in the 2026 session,” he said, “but even then we have until the end of that year to even come up with some additional recommendations, some additional modifying legislation for…into the next 2027 session.”
In light of that timeline, there was some talk of issuing an interim report to meet next July’s deadline, with a subsequent final report coming later in the year or in 2026.
So far all but one of the task force’s seats have been filled. The only remaining vacancy is a position reserved for a representative of Native American tribes in the state. Other members broadly agreed that filling that position was, as Coop put it, “critical.”
Coop also said he intended to select a program manager to help keep the group on schedule. And he noted the importance of including testimony from people who have experienced legal consequences as the result of psychedelics activity, adding that he was unaware of whether task force members themselves have firsthand experience in the criminal legal system.
Among other topics raised at the initial meetings, member Laura Barrett—a nurse, educator and chair of the University of Miami’s Cannabis Nurse Task Force—noted that many of the group’s other members seemed to focus more on mental, rather than physical health. Another member said she felt input from more voices is essential to avoid over-reliance on anecdotes and invidual expertise.
As originally introduced, the House version of the task force legislation contained more prescriptive requirements to explore and issue recommendations on aspects of psychedelics policy such as “systems to support statewide online sales of natural psychedelic substances with home delivery” and “testing and packaging requirements for products containing natural psychedelic substances with clear and accurate labeling of potency.” That language was ultimately removed, however.
The task force legislation advanced about two years after a different law took effect creating a state fund to provide “cost-free” access to psychedelics like psilocybin, MDMA and ketamine for military veterans suffering from PTSD and traumatic brain injury.
Separately in Maryland, Moore said in August that as the state works to build upon its marijuana legalization law, he will continue to “advocate for a sane and a standard federal policy,” including banking reform so that small cannabis businesses have access to capital.
The governor added that while he’s committed to ensuring that social equity is integral to Maryland’s cannabis market—citing his recent mass pardon for past marijuana and paraphernalia convictions—it also remains critical that federal reform advances.
Moore has been discussing his vision for cannabis reform frequently over the past few months, as he promotes his recent mass pardon forgiving more than 175,000 marijuana and paraphernalia convictions.
That clemency was about more than addressing the public policy consequences of criminalization,” Moore said in a separate interview. As someone who was exposed to the criminal legal system at an early age, and having been a medical cannabis patient himself, he said there’s an important personal psychological impact of attaining that relief.
In July, Moore and the president of the NAACP also promoted the state’s historic mass marijuana pardon, which they said would unlock the economic potential of people targeted by criminalization. But the governor also stressed the need to get the word out about next steps for the majority of pardon recipients whose records weren’t automatically expunged by his clemency move.
Moore has also gained praise from the White House and other officials such as Colorado Gov. Jared Polis (D) for his cannabis clemency move.
Earlier this summer, state officials reported that since Maryland’s launch of its adult-use cannabis market launched in July of last year, licensed retailers had sold more than $1.1 billion worth of legal marijuana products, including more than $700 million to adult consumers and $400 million in medical marijuana.
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Photo courtesy of Wikimedia/Workman.
Maryland
Man killed in Maryland barn fire believed to be ‘The Wire’ actor Bobby J. Brown
The St. Mary’s County Sheriff’s Office is reporting that a 62-year-old man died in a barn fire at his home in Chaptico, Md. It’s believed that the victim was actor Bobby J. Brown, who starred on “The Wire.”
Maryland
Maryland litigator convicted of tax evasion over income from high-stakes poker
MARYLAND (WBFF) — A prominent Supreme Court litigator who also published a popular blog about the nation’s highest court was convicted Wednesday of tax evasion and related charges stemming from his secretive lifestyle as an ultra-high-stakes poker player.
A federal jury found SCOTUSblog co-founder Thomas Goldstein guilty of 12 of 16 counts after a six-week trial in Greenbelt, Maryland. Jurors deliberated for approximately two days before convicting Goldstein of one count of tax evasion, four of eight counts of aiding and assisting in the preparation of false tax returns, four counts of willful failure to timely pay taxes, and three counts of false statements on loan applications.
Goldstein was charged with failing to pay taxes on millions of dollars in gambling income. Justice Department prosecutors also accused him of diverting money from his law firm to pay gambling debts and falsely deducting gambling debts as business expenses.
Goldstein argued more than 40 cases before the Supreme Court before retiring in 2023. He was part of the legal team that represented Democrat Al Gore in the Supreme Court litigation over the 2000 election ultimately won by Republican President George W. Bush.
Goldstein’s indictment a year ago sent shockwaves through the legal community in Washington, D.C. Many friends and colleagues didn’t know the extent of his gambling.
“He lied to everyone around him,” Justice Department prosecutor Sean Beaty said during the trial’s closing arguments.
Defense attorney Jonathan Kravis said the government rushed to judgment and failed to adequately investigate the case. Goldstein made “innocent mistakes” on his tax returns but didn’t cheat on his taxes or knowingly make false statements on his tax returns, Kravis told jurors.
“A mistake is not a crime,” he said.
Beaty described Goldstein as a “willful tax cheat.” Goldstein raked in approximately $50 million in poker winnings in 2016, including roughly $22 million that he won playing in Asia, according to Beaty. The prosecutor said the tax evasion scheme “fell apart” when another gambler, feeling cheated by Goldstein, notified the IRS about a 2016 debt owed to the attorney.
“It was a textbook tax-evasion scheme,” Beaty said. “And Mr. Goldstein executed that nearly flawlessly.”
The trial, which started Jan. 12, included testimony by “Spider-Man” star Tobey Maguire, an avid poker player who enlisted Goldstein’s help in recovering a gambling debt from a billionaire.
Goldstein, who testified in his own defense, denied any wrongdoing. He has said he repeatedly instructed his law firm’s staff and accountants to correctly characterize his personal expenses. In a 2014 email, he told a firm employee that “we always play completely by the rules.”
Goldstein also was accused of lying to IRS agents and hiding his gambling debts from his accountants, employees and mortgage lenders. He omitted a $15 million gambling debt from mortgage loan applications while looking for a new home in Washington, D.C., with his wife in 2021, his indictment alleges.
“He was thinking only of his wife when he left off the gambling debts,” Kravis said.
Maryland
Maryland worker disguised himself as a woman before executing millionaire philanthropist Robert Fuller at senior living facility: police
A 22-year-old assisted living employee accused of disguising himself in long female wigs and executing an 87-year-old millionaire philanthropist he treated nightly, is now also charged with shooting at a Maryland state trooper Tuesday while on the run.
The Montgomery County Department of Police’s Major Crimes Division confirmed during a news conference on Wednesday that Marquis Emilio James, 22, of White Marsh, Maryland, was arrested in connection with the Valentine’s Day homicide of 87-year-old Robert G. Fuller Jr. at the Cogir Potomac Senior Living Facility, and the shooting of a Maryland State Police trooper Tuesday during a traffic stop in West Baltimore.
James, who had been employed as a medication technician at the senior living facility since October, was allegedly seen on surveillance footage entering and exiting through a tampered courtyard door around the time Fuller was fatally shot in the head in his apartment.
Nothing appeared to have been taken from Fuller’s home during the crime, according to Montgomery County Police Chief Marc Yamada.
Investigators later determined the door’s alarm sensor had been disabled in January — on a day when James had been the only person seen using the door.
During a search, folded paper towels used to prop doors open on the day of the murder and again days later, were found by police.
Yamada said that days after Fuller’s death, James was found inside the facility after his shift ended, gave a suspicious explanation to other workers, triggered another exterior door alarm, and fled when a supervisor was going to be notified.
The door he used to exit had also been tampered with, according to authorities.
At about 3:30 a.m. Tuesday, a Maryland State Police trooper pulled over James’ car to conduct a traffic stop after noticing he was missing license plates.
As the trooper approached the car, James, who was driving, suddenly opened the car door and fired two shots, said Maryland State Police Lt. Col. Steve Decerbo.
The bullets narrowly missed the trooper by inches, and he only sustained minor injuries.
“Without a doubt, our Maryland State trooper escaped an outcome that could have ended much differently,” Decerbo said.
James immediately drove away, and investigators later recovered a shell casing from the scene that matched ballistic evidence from Fuller’s murder, linking the two cases.
Montgomery County Police, Maryland State Police and the US Marshals took James into custody Wednesday afternoon in Rockville after a brief foot chase.
James is charged in Montgomery County with first-degree murder, which carries a maximum penalty of life in prison.
He is being held without bond, with a court hearing scheduled.
While conducting two search warrants in Baltimore County, investigators recovered “numerous” wigs and a mask, consistent with what appeared to be a disguise in surveillance footage.
Police initially said there was no clear description of the person’s gender or race, adding the suspect seen in the footage could be male or female due to the long wig.
Yamada added police “do not have a good sense of why” James allegedly shot and killed Fuller.
“Upon speaking with him, he said their relationship was very good, and he would never have hurt Mr. Fuller,” he said. “So we’re hopeful that as we get further in … we’re going to get a better sense of what was going on behind the scenes, what types of communications Marquis James had, [and] what he was searching on his electronic devices. We’re hopeful that that’s going to lead us to a better sense of why.”
Yamada would not confirm if James had a criminal record.
Maine State Rep. Bill Bridgeo, who met Fuller while working as city manager in Augusta, told NBC 4 Washington Fuller was a prominent attorney and a retired Navy Reserve officer.
Bridgeo told the local station Fuller donated millions to the community to build a new YMCA, hospital and expand a high school.
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