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The Cannabis Control Commission is advising customers to steer clear of the Slap N Tickle.
Tests have revealed that some products sold through the second quarter of last year were “potentially contaminated” with “yeast, casting, and coliforms above appropriate limitations,” according to the CCC.
The Commission has taken steps to stop the potentially contaminated materials from being sold again through Metrc, a third-party cannabis governmental system that monitors every grow from seed to purchase in Massachusetts, according to an alert from the Commission. The Commission mandates that all licensees evaluate the thc profile and potential contaminants in marijuana and marijuana products.
The CCC claims that the contaminants were discovered after the products had previously passed tests but that “additional compliance checking ordered by the Commission” had not. The pot was sold, according to the committee, between May 31 and January 30.
The possible damaged items include a pair of isolates — Tiger’s Eye and the above Slap N Tickle — sold in 3.5 ounce bottles and 0.8 ounce prerolls by East Boston Cannabis Co., Boston, Bud Barn, Winchendon, Liberty Cannabis, Springfield, Capital Cannabis, Douglas, and Indica LLC, Adams.
Items of Carbon Fiber, Frosted Jungle, Highland OG, and Silver Cush sold as free rose or prerolls are also likely contaminated, the committee said.
Those products were sold by 253 Organic, LLC, Montague, Ashli’s, Inc., Attleboro, KG Collective Brockton, LLC, Brockton, Holistic Industries, Inc. places in Somerville, Springfield, and Monson, Enlite Cannabis Dispensary, LLC, Northampton and Springfield, Herbal Pathways, Pittsfield, Great Barrington Retail, Inc., Great Barrington, 6 Bricks, LLC, Springfield, Cypress Tree Management Natick, Inc., Natick, Erba C3 Dorchester LLC, Boston, Massachusetts Citizens for Social Equity LLC, Boston, Rooted In, LLC, Boston, Smokey Leaf LLC, Greenfield, E, Panacea Wellness, Quincy, and Liberty Cannabis, Easthampton.
No one has yet reported any health issues linked to the possible rotten cannabis, according to the CCC, and they are advising that the items can be disposed of at home.  , A entire list , of the potentially contaminated materials and where they were sold can be found on the CCC site.
Consumers and patients who have any of the damaged goods may either kill them or returning them to the shop or treatment facility where they were purchased for removal. For more information, they wrote, call the Marijuana Establishment or Medical Marijuana Treatment Center where the products were purchased.
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