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Wednesday, September 24, 2025
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Marijuana is illegal in Wisconsin, so why do other THC products get a pass?
Most people know you can’t legally consume marijuana in Wisconsin, regardless of whether it’s for medical or recreational purposes.
So what’s with all those “legal weed” billboards along the highways, and how are these shops advertising delta-8 products in their windows still allowed to sell the cannabis compound?
Put simply: Because unlike delta-9, the main psychoactive compound in marijuana, other compounds like delta-8 are not regulated by the state. When concentrated and altered, these compounds can produce a similar effect on the body as pot, if only a slight one.
Most delta-8 also comes from hemp, which is legal to grow in Wisconsin.
What’s the difference between marijuana and hemp?
Marijuana and hemp are the same plant, cannabis sativa. But whether it’s legally considered marijuana or hemp comes down to how much THC, or delta-9, the plant contains. The current limit for the amount of THC content for hemp is 0.3%, which is a trace amount, UW-Madison professor of pharmaceutical history Lucas Richert said.
To keep the crop’s THC within the legal limits, farmers have to stay vigilant. Typical plant stressors like droughts, floods or temperature extremes can lead to spikes in THC content.
If the percentage of THC is higher than 0.3%, it’s considered marijuana and becomes illegal to sell. Farmers whose crops contain a percentage higher than the legal limit have to destroy them — sometimes, ironically, by burning them. Crop insurance often doesn’t cover losses when the THC potency is too high.
Assuming the THC level in the hemp is within limits, the buds can then be turned into CBD oil or further processed into compounds like delta-8 or THC-V.
Why is hemp now legal?
Hemp had been a staple crop in Wisconsin for more than 100 years before the federal government decided to regulate cannabis plants, Richert said.
But by the 1930s, most states had some form of regulation for marijuana. The federal government first put regulations and taxes on the plant in 1937 under the Marijuana Tax Act. The law allowed the government to charge an annual tax of $24 (about $551 in today’s dollars).
While the taxes were meant to reduce the amount of recreational marijuana use, they also decimated the industrial hemp industry. In 1957, the last legal hemp crop was grown in Wisconsin. By the 1970s, the federal government had listed marijuana as a Schedule I drug, an illegal drug with no accepted medical use and highly susceptible to abuse.
That all changed in 2018, when the federal farm bill carved out a legal definition for hemp for the first time, Richert said. The bill only set a legal limit for delta-9, however, leaving the plant’s other isomers and compounds, such as delta-8 and delta-10, legalized and unregulated at the federal level. In creating the definition of hemp, federal lawmakers set the legal limit of THC at 0.3%.
“It's been very recently that people are starting to think about closing some of those loopholes,” Richert said.
What’s the difference between all of these cannabis products on the market?
Delta-9 remains the main psychoactive compound people think of as marijuana, and is illegal in Wisconsin.
But by extracting cannabidiol from hemp plants and subjecting it to chemical reactions in a lab, called isomerization, scientists can rearrange the molecular structure of cannabidiol to create compounds like delta-8, delta-10, THC-V and THCA.
“You're one molecule away from a misdemeanor,” Richert said. “Those chemical differences are tiny, but they can mean really big legal consequences.”
Are compounds like delta-8 safe to consume?
Each of the products extracted from hemp plants can have differing effects on the body, and testing on those products is often less rigorous than traditional marijuana products, Richert said. In general, the psychoactive effects are milder, meaning the high and other side effects someone might feel are less pronounced than if they were ingesting marijuana.
The federal Centers for Disease Control says consumption of cannabis-related products is not risk-free. A de-regulated market without testing standards makes it more difficult for consumers to know whether what they’re consuming is safe.
The biggest misconception Richert sees around the THC market is that all of the different products with varying CBD derivatives will have the same effect on a person.
Two delta-8 products made by two different companies could have different impacts on a person because there are no testing standards.
“It's really important that the consumer have a good understanding of variability in the marketplace and that they are seeking to understand the type of products that they're they're purchasing outside of a regulated cannabis market,” Richert said. “Because we don't have a regulated personal use market in the state, we don't have a really robust way of protecting the consumers.”
What is the state doing to regulate any of this?
Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle have attempted to regulate these products.
Democrats like Gov. Tony Evers would like to see marijuana legalized and regulated for both medical and recreational use, with Evers having attempted to include it in recent budget proposals.
Republicans in the Legislature got close to allowing medical marijuana for people with chronic illnesses like cancer last session, but infighting on how to regulate it stalled the bill. Senate Republicans balked at the idea of state-run dispensaries through the Department of Health Services, arguing that was not the government’s responsibility.
Two-thirds of Wisconsinites believe marijuana should be legalized, a Marquette Law School poll from June showed.
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Tuesday, September 23, 2025
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Monday, September 22, 2025
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Franksville man sentenced in sexual assault of a child case
Milana Doné
RACINE — A Franksville man was sentenced to 10 years in prison Friday in connection to the sexual assault of a teenage girl.
Joshua Fleeman, 33, also was ordered to serve 10 years of extended supervision.
He was charged with one count of repeated sexual assault of the same child (at least three violations of first or second degree sexual assault) and one count of second degree sexual assault of a child.
Fleeman pleaded guilty to the first count Aug. 5, and the second count was dismissed but read into the court record.
On July 4, officers with the Mount Pleasant Police Department were sent to a Franksville residence and spoke with a woman who alleged that she found the girl and Fleeman in bed together.
According to a criminal complaint, Fleeman reportedly told police he was not cuddling with the girl but had gone to her room to say goodnight.
On July 10, the girl reportedly told child advocacy interviewers the sexual assaults began when she was 11.
She alleged Fleeman would buy her things, take her places and supply her with THC cartridges, according to the complaint.

