Sarah Stewart, a spokeswoman for the Oklahoma Department of Public Safety, said Thursday morning that the agency is aware of the situation and officials “are still working through the intricacies of the new law.”

“I want to point out that this man will have the opportunity to get those seeds back after it goes through a certain process,” Stewart said. “It’s no different than anything else that is seized on a traffic stop. Those seeds will not be destroyed.”

In a Sept. 5 tweet, the OMMA said no state agency will supply seeds and that “medical marijuana license holders must determine on their own how to obtain seeds at this point.” The man in the video seems to indicate to the trooper that the seeds she seized had been pulled from cannabis flower he legally purchased.

Sales of cannabis products at dispensaries became legal as of Oct. 26, as did possession of mature plants by patients and businesses. Seedlings were legal to possess in Oklahoma as of Sept. 3.