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The author of this article is Richard Keyt, an Arizona business law attorney who is the creator of this Arizona medical marijuana law website. Connect with Richard at 480-664-7478 or on Google+

High Marijuana Taxes Could Derail Legalization Plans

Forbes:  “When Congress banned marijuana in 1937, it did so in the guise of taxation, imposing a prohibitive levy on cannabis and created criminal penalties for those who failed to pay it. Marijuana taxes also played a prominent role in what may be the beginning of the end for pot prohibition: the legalization measures that voters in Colorado and Washington approved last fall . . . . The dilemma is especially clear in Washington, where I-502 specified a 25 percent excise tax at three levels: sales between producers and processors, between processors and retailers, and between retailers and consumers. That’s in addition to the standard state sales tax of 8.75 percent.”

By |2013-11-15T19:32:31-07:00October 17th, 2013|Stories & Articles, Tax Issues|Comments Off on High Marijuana Taxes Could Derail Legalization Plans

Tinkerer, Lawyer, Hustler, Lies: One Man’s Path to a Dope Fortune

If you are a Medbox, Inc., stockholder or considering purchasing stock Medbox is offering in its current public offering you must read the three stories listed below.

After an extensive investigation, the Southern Investigative Reporting Foundation published a blockbuster story about publicly traded Medbox and its front man Pejman “Vincent” Mehdizadeh, “a 34-year-old with a consistent record of legal problems going back to age 18, only one of which was disclosed to investors.”  Here are some choice statements from the story entitled “Tinkerer, Lawyer, Hustler, Lies: One Man’s Path to a Dope Fortune“:

“In the spring of 2010, exasperated police detectives from all over Los Angeles began phoning the county’s consumer affairs department to complain that an outfit calling itself the Active Lawyers Referral Service had misled its working-class customers from 2005 to 2008 by referring them to a law firm that billed them for work—but never finished the job. Their tales got positively woolly: Several claimed that Pejman Vincent Mehdizadeh, the founder of the referral service and the manager of the law firm, had posed as a lawyer and his father, Parviz, had given them legal advice as they sought work visas. (Pejman and Parviz use the names Vincent and Paul, respectively, for business.)

Three years later the consumer affairs unit, along with the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office, sought to prosecute Vincent Mehdizadeh, who, after months of wrangling, pleaded no contest to various criminal charges. He consented to pay $450,000 in restitution to his victims, thereby avoiding a four-year sentence in a California state penitentiary. (His father, Parviz, pleaded no contest to one misdemeanor charge.) . . .

Running his own dispensary business had proved to be a profound headache for Mehdizadeh: In 2007 the Drug Enforcement Agency raided Herbal Nutrition Center, his dispensary; and a lawsuit resulted from another dispensary transaction in which he was accused of posing as a lawyer and a real estate agent at different times. (Mehdizadeh told the Southern Investigative Reporting Foundation that he paid $350,000 to the plaintiffs to settle the matter and “make it go away.”) . . .

Mehdizadeh’s many legal problems have never been disclosed to Medbox investors—except for a 2007 incident when he failed to produce a clear title to a car he was selling yet accepted a credit card payment for the vehicle anyway. The consumer affairs investigation, which had been headed for trial with the possibility of prison time for Mehdizadeh before he pleaded no contest, was blithely waved away in a Medbox filing as “a private matter.”

Read the whole troubling story.  One thing the story did not mention was whether there is a single medical marijuana vending machine actually used in daily operations of a medical marijuana dispensary in any of the states that have legalized medical marijuana.  If you know of an operating Mebox medical marijuana vending machine please let me know the location and name of the dispensary.

See also Yahoo Finance’s story entitled “Medbox: Emerging Marijuana Player, or Disaster Waiting to Happen?” that contains these statements:

“What the foundation reports ought to give investors ample pause before hopping on the erstwhile legal pot gravy train stock promoters are touting. . . .

Make no mistake: What Mehdizadeh was getting rapped for is well north of a citation for drinking beer underage and serves to raise serious questions about what is known as “Fitness for Office.”

There were charges—and a series of no contest pleas–for breaking and entering, credit card fraud, solicitation of a prostitute and trespass with intent to injure.

What is even less savory is how a legal referral business Mehdizadeh ran with his dad and a job he had managing a law office in Los Angeles between 2005 and 2008 went so far off the rails that the District Attorney’s office was ready to take him to trial on consumer fraud this summer. Mehdizadeh agreed to a plea bargain that has him paying $450,000 in restitution to avoid a four-year jail sentence.

First to tell anyone that lessons aplenty have been learned and that he stopped screwing up years ago–Mehdizadeh also acknowledged posing as a lawyer without having gone to law school–the suddenly quite rich entrepreneur is laser-focused on Medbox’s future.

Which should be the real cause for concern among Medbox shareholders.”

Southcoast Today published a story called “High-profile marijuana millionaire behind multiple RMD applicants; locals cry foul” that states:

“Vincent Mehdizadeh, a West Coast marijuana millionaire with a conviction for defrauding immigrants, is backing nearly one in 10 of prospective dispensaries in the Bay State, causing some local competitors to cry foul.”

Update:  Medbox issued a press release dated October 16, 2913, that addresses recent negative publicty about Vincent Mehdizadeh.  The press release states:

“Company executives caution company shareholders that while the media has been extremely supportive of Medbox as one of the only viable medical marijuana related public companies, with success there will always be detractors that publish deceptive and misleading articles about the company and its executives.

‘I have witnessed a person calling himself a professional journalist resort to defamatory statements, the majority of which are in most cases half-truths and in some cases a complete fabrication of events that purportedly transpired in my life before I founded Medbox,’ stated Vincent Mehdizadeh, Chief Operations Officer of Medbox, Inc.

Mehdizadeh states that he will not be using company funds to seek legal recourse against the reporter in question.

‘I’d rather spend company funds on further developing our business,’ said Mehdizadeh. ‘I will self-fund any recourse I have planned regarding this particular journalist. When confronted, this journalist initially denied having any ties to short interest players in MDBX stock, but upon further inquiry admitted the relationships in an email. I look forward to seeing just how deep that rabbit hole goes’.”

While doing a Google search today I found a June 28, 2013, press release about the Mehdizadehs, father and son, issued by the LA County Department of Consumer Affairs that states:

“A father-and-son team who pretended to be a law firm and defrauded dozens of victims seeking immigration help have pled guilty to multiple charges of grand theft.

Brian J. Stiger, Director of the County of Los Angeles Department of Consumer Affairs (DCA), has announced today that Pejman Vincent Mehdizadeh and Parviz Paul Mehdizadeh were ordered to pay full restitution to victims who reported their losses to DCA.

The Mehdizadehs took money for immigration cases and either did not file or filed fraudulent documents with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS). They are responsible for defrauding victims out of hundreds of thousands of dollars while offering services in areas such as immigration, bankruptcy, divorce, and mortgage modifications, often without providing any services. Many of the Mehdizadehs’ victims were forced to leave the country because of their failure to file appropriate documents.

Pejman Vincent Mehdizadeh, 34, of Los Angeles , pled to two felony grand theft counts and Parviz Paul Mehdizadeh, 78, of Calabasas, pled to one misdemeanor count.  Restitution will approach a half a million dollars, not including money distributed from the State Bar of California Restitution Fund, most of which has already been collected and distributed to the known victims.

‘“Immigration consultants often tell consumer s that they have ‘special connections’ or know about secret programs to help immigrants become legal citizens,’ Director Stiger said. ‘They will say anything to gain your trust and take your money. Consumers should remember that if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.’

The Mehdizadehs also ran a lawyer referral service, under the name Active Lawyer Referral Service, and referred clients to themselves.

The prosecutors were Dana Aratani and Kathleen Tuttle of the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s office.”

By |2017-02-12T07:40:00-07:00October 16th, 2013|Medbox, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Tinkerer, Lawyer, Hustler, Lies: One Man’s Path to a Dope Fortune

Phoenix Police to Medical-Pot Community: “Medibles” Will Be Tested for Extracts

Phoenix New Times:  “Phoenix police say they might bust you for holding the wrong kind of cookie.  In researching this week’s cover story about marijuana food products and concentrates, ‘Half Baked,’ New Times asked police to clarify their position on the preparations of marijuana not protected by the Arizona Medical Marijuana Act.  Patients and dispensary operators won’t like the answer, though it might not surprise them.”

Here is the content of the email message Phoenix Police Sergeant Martos sent to the New Times:

Hash oil purity:

“In order to identify marijuana we need to be able to look at plant material under the microscope and observe structures on the leaf surfaces. If someone has removed the resin from the plant material by mechanical or chemical means what we get is hashish, hash oil or cannabutter for example.

I can tell you that hashish runs the gamut in color from green to dark brown. Under the microscope it appears resinous and not like plant material and occasionally there may be some particles of plant material adhering to it. The resinous material does not look like plant material, nor does it contain the features in place for us to look at so we do not call it marijuana. Testing the hashish in the lab will allow us to identify THC and other cannabinoids which is how we arrive at classifying the material as cannabis (narcotic drug) vs. marijuana.

The lab does not grade hashish or marijuana for that matter for purity, quality etc. If we receive a food product as evidence, which contain no plant material, but we can identify THC etc. the material will be reported out as cannabis (narcotic drug). Our examination of items submitted as evidence is using definitions contained in ARS 13-3401. We do not use the AMMA as a means of testing evidence submitted to the laboratory.

“cannabutter”: This substance is considered a narcotic drug if created from extracts from marijuana. We deal with this in accordance with title 13.

We do not have a department policy for every single Title 13 criminal violation. It is our job as law enforcement personnel to enforce the laws of Arizona, which is what is being done when it comes to the aforementioned violations related to use/possession of cannabis. Department policies are not specific to each A.R.S. code.”

By |2013-10-15T07:28:00-07:00October 15th, 2013|Legal Issues, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Phoenix Police to Medical-Pot Community: “Medibles” Will Be Tested for Extracts

Judge Rules Maricopa County Cannot Create Zoning that Prohibits Medical Marijuana Dispensaries

Arizona Daily Star:  “Counties cannot do an end-run around the Medical Marijuana Act by changing their zoning laws to make it impossible to open a dispensary, a judge ruled Monday. . . . ‘A county zoning ordinance that poses a categorical prohibition of medical marijuana violates state law that limits its zoning jurisdiction,’’ the judge wrote.”

By |2013-10-15T07:22:09-07:00October 15th, 2013|AZ Marijuana Law Lawsuits, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Judge Rules Maricopa County Cannot Create Zoning that Prohibits Medical Marijuana Dispensaries

Judge’s Ruling Opens Door for Sun City Pot Dispensary

arizona.newszap.com: “A marijuana dispensary in Sun City remains a possibility following a judge’s ruling, but county legal officials vow to continue the fight to keep it out of the community.   Superior Court Judge Michael Gordon Oct. 14 granted a pretrial verdict in favor of White Mountain Health Center, which plans a dispensary for Sun City, and rejected a similar request on behalf of the county. The judge’s ruling effectively overturned Maricopa County’s zoning ordinance for medical marijuana dispensaries, ruling that the ordinance appeared to be a “transparent attempt” to keep the businesses out of unincorporated areas of the county.”

By |2017-02-12T07:40:00-07:00October 14th, 2013|AZ Marijuana Law Lawsuits, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Judge’s Ruling Opens Door for Sun City Pot Dispensary

Industrial Hemp Harvested in Colorado, but Is It Legal?

Arizona Republic:  “Southeast Colorado farmer Ryan Loflin tried an illegal crop this year. He didn’t hide it from neighbors, and he never feared law enforcement would come asking about it. . . . Finished hemp is legal in the U.S., but growing it remains off-limits under federal law.”

By |2013-10-14T07:19:04-07:00October 14th, 2013|Colorado News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Industrial Hemp Harvested in Colorado, but Is It Legal?

More States May Vote to Legalize Marijuana

Bloomberg:  “Voter support for legal marijuana in Washington and Colorado is spurring similar campaigns in California and three other states that together may bring pot within lawful reach of almost 1-in-5 Americans.  Advocates are seeking the signatures of registered voters in California, Arizona, Oregon and Alaska, with a combined population of 49 million, to put the question on ballots in 2014.

By |2015-04-06T18:57:49-07:00October 11th, 2013|Stories & Articles|Comments Off on More States May Vote to Legalize Marijuana

Feds Drop Forfeiture Lawsuits Brought Against Landlords Who Leased to Dispensaries

OC Weekly:  “The U.S. Attorney’s office has formally dropped its case against the Anaheim landlord who stood to lose his $1.5 million retirement property over a $37 pot sale in a dispensary he’d already evicted . . . . the feds also dropped similar cases against three other landlords, Dr. Mark Burcaw . . . as well as Tom Woo and . . . Walter and Diane Botsch . . . .”

See also “U.S. Attorney In L.A. Drops Forfeiture Cases Against Dispensary Landlords.”

By |2019-06-14T08:27:45-07:00October 10th, 2013|Federal Dispensary Attacks, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Feds Drop Forfeiture Lawsuits Brought Against Landlords Who Leased to Dispensaries

Medical-Pot Edibles Are Legal, but Prosecutors and Cops Aren’t Backing Off

Phoenix New Times:  “Uncle Herb’s medical-marijuana dispensary, tucked away near pine trees in an industrial area of south Payson, has the homey feel of a country store. . . . The super-potent paste gets added to Uncle Herb’s growing takeout menu of medicinal food and drink products sold to qualified patients . . . . Essentially, legal officials claim that the medical-pot law provides no protection for extracts, concentrates, or the food and drinks that may contain them. Under their theory, qualified patients and dispensary officials could be charged with a felony for possessing or making marijuana extracts.”

By |2013-10-14T06:58:17-07:00October 10th, 2013|DHS Rules, Legal Issues, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Medical-Pot Edibles Are Legal, but Prosecutors and Cops Aren’t Backing Off

Navajo Sheriff Raids Beyond Compassion in Pinetop

The Navajo County Sheriff raided Mike Lytle for the second time this year.  Earlier in the year the Sheriff raided Mike’s Mountain Meds and charged him with five felonies.  This time the Sheriff raided his business called Beyond Compassion and charged Mike with two felonies.

By |2013-10-14T07:13:35-07:00October 9th, 2013|Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Navajo Sheriff Raids Beyond Compassion in Pinetop

Court Ruling Looms on Right to Grow Your Own Medical Marijuana

Verde Independent:  “Medical marijuana patients could learn later this month if they have a constitutional right to grow their own weed. Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Katherine Cooper said Wednesday she will consider on Oct. 18 a bid by the Department of Health Services to have the lawsuit thrown out.”

By |2017-02-12T07:40:00-07:00October 4th, 2013|Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Court Ruling Looms on Right to Grow Your Own Medical Marijuana

State Fights Lawsuit to Expand Medical Marijuana Growing

Maricopa Monitor:  “A constitutional right to control your own health care is not a right to grow your own medical marijuana, according to an attorney for the state’s top health official.  Gregory Falls is asking Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Katherine Cooper to throw out claims by two men that they are constitutionally entitled to plant, grow and harvest the drug.”

By |2013-10-11T07:28:29-07:00September 24th, 2013|Stories & Articles|Comments Off on State Fights Lawsuit to Expand Medical Marijuana Growing

Arizona Dispensaries Wary of Effort to Legalize Marijuana

Daily Journal: “A national marijuana-advocacy group’s support for asking Arizona voters in 2016 to legalize marijuana is drawing a wary reaction from the state’s budding industry of medical marijuana dispensaries.”

By |2015-04-06T18:57:49-07:00September 21st, 2013|Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Arizona Dispensaries Wary of Effort to Legalize Marijuana

Murrieta, CA, Bans Medical Marijuana Dispensaries

The Press Enterprise:  “Murrieta officials decided Tuesday, Sept. 17, to keep intact an eight-year ban on medical marijuana dispensaries everywhere in the city, while moving the prohibition to a different section of city law that attorneys say can withstand a legal challenge.

By |2017-10-07T09:56:01-07:00September 18th, 2013|California News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Murrieta, CA, Bans Medical Marijuana Dispensaries

Attorney Argues in Court that Arizona’s Medical Pot Law Doesn’t Grant Right to Grow Own Pot

East Valley Tribune:  “A constitutional right to control your own health care is not a right to grow your own medical marijuana, according to an attorney for the state’s top health official.  Gregory Falls is asking Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Katherine Cooper to throw out claims by two men who say they are constitutionally entitled to plant, grow and harvest the drug.”

By |2013-09-20T08:06:56-07:00September 17th, 2013|AZ Marijuana Law Lawsuits, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Attorney Argues in Court that Arizona’s Medical Pot Law Doesn’t Grant Right to Grow Own Pot

Regulating Medical Marijuana in Illinois Isn’t Easy

ROYT News:  “Even though Illinois has signed a medical marijuana bill into law, the Department of Agriculture has much work to do in regards to regulations.  Marijuana is still illegal according to federal law, which complicates matters. Still, potential growers are clamoring to get in on the ground floor in Illinois, which will limit cultivation centers to 22, and 60 dispensaries. Inspecting and regulating batches of medical marijuana may prove to be too costly and inefficient. Many are concerned that doctors recommending the drug do not understand it well enough.”

By |2017-02-12T07:40:00-07:00September 16th, 2013|Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Regulating Medical Marijuana in Illinois Isn’t Easy

Medical pot: Will Colorado’s “green rush” last?

60 Minutes:  “Twenty states have now legalized the medical use of marijuana for the treatment of things like glaucoma, the effects of chemotherapy, and chronic pain; defying federal laws that still consider marijuana more dangerous than cocaine and methamphetamine. In November, voters in two states, Washington and Colorado, went so far as to approve marijuana recreational use too. . . . if you want to know what legalized marijuana might look like, the place to go is Colorado, which has the most developed medical marijuana industry in the country.”

By |2013-09-16T07:06:39-07:00September 16th, 2013|Colorado News, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Medical pot: Will Colorado’s “green rush” last?

Feds Seek To Corral Medical Marijuana ‘Wild West’

NPR:  “the administration’s hands-off position in Colorado and Washington will reverberate well beyond those states. And it could actually end up imposing some semblance of order in what drug law expert Mark Kleiman describes as the ‘Wild West’ of medical marijuana.  ‘And that would be a potentially very, very good result,’ says Kleiman, who previously worked in the Justice Department’s criminal division and is author of Marijuana Legalization: What Everyone Needs to Know. ‘Medical marijuana is a free-for-all in many states’,”

By |2013-09-16T07:01:57-07:00September 16th, 2013|Colorado News, Federal Dispensary Attacks, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Feds Seek To Corral Medical Marijuana ‘Wild West’

Washington to Change Rules on Where Pot Shops can Locate

KomoNews:  “Washington state is changing its plans for where marijuana businesses can be located, after the Justice Department said that enforcing federal drug laws near schools and playgrounds remains a priority ‘and will not be compromised for convenience’. . . . the DOJ told the board that it will continue enforcing the law as it has been, and any pot business within 1,000 feet of a school or playground – as measured by a straight line – is at risk of prosecution.”

By |2013-09-15T10:42:58-07:00September 15th, 2013|Federal Dispensary Attacks, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Washington to Change Rules on Where Pot Shops can Locate

Florence May Amend Dispensary Zoning Ordinance

Florence Reminder & Blade Tribune:  “Town staff is proposing changes to the medical marijuana ordinance in response to some of the recurring issues and concerns with past applications to operate a dispensary in Florence.”

By |2013-09-13T07:39:56-07:00September 13th, 2013|Stories & Articles, Zoning|Comments Off on Florence May Amend Dispensary Zoning Ordinance

Marijuana Policy Project to Try to Get Marijuana Legalization on 2016 Arizona Ballot

Phoenix New Times:  “The national Marijuana Policy Project, bolstered by federal approval of state pot-freedom laws, plans to put a Colorado-style legalization initiative on Arizona’s ballot for 2016. It’s part of a master plan to pass similar legalization laws in 10 states by 2017.

By |2013-09-13T07:36:36-07:00September 13th, 2013|AZ Legislation, Legal Issues, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Marijuana Policy Project to Try to Get Marijuana Legalization on 2016 Arizona Ballot

Mesa Wrestling with Own Rules on Pot-clinic Sites

Arizona Republic:  “Zoning rules limiting the locations of Mesa medical-marijuana dispensaries could be eased after a potential dispensary operator’s struggle to find an appropriate site sparked a push among city officials to re-examine city guidelines.

By |2013-09-12T20:46:59-07:00September 12th, 2013|Stories & Articles, Zoning|Comments Off on Mesa Wrestling with Own Rules on Pot-clinic Sites

Feds Seek to Legalize Marijuana Industry Banking

Associated Press:  “The Justice Department and federal banking regulators will help clear the way for financial institutions to transact business with the legitimate marijuana industry without fear of prosecution, Deputy Attorney General James Cole told Congress on Tuesday.”

See also “Justice working with banks on how to do business with pot sellers.”

By |2019-06-14T08:27:45-07:00September 10th, 2013|Banking Issues|Comments Off on Feds Seek to Legalize Marijuana Industry Banking

Scottsdale’s First Medical Marijuana Dispensary Opens

Arizona Republic:  “Scottsdale’s only medical-marijuana clinic has opened and is serving 15 to 20 patients a day there to purchase the drug to combat a variety of ailments.  Monarch Wellness, near Via de Ventura and Pima Road, offers a variety of marijuana strains as well as edibles.

By |2019-06-14T08:27:45-07:00September 9th, 2013|Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Scottsdale’s First Medical Marijuana Dispensary Opens

Medical Marijuana Roadmap Paved By DOJ Decision

Huff Post:  “Medical marijuana businesses worried that federal agents will close them down now have a roadmap to avoid prosecution, courtesy of the Justice Department’s decision to allow legal pot in Colorado and Washington state.  The agency said last week that even though the drug remains illegal under federal law, it won’t intervene to block state pot laws or prosecute as long as states create strict and effective controls that follow eight conditions.”

By |2017-02-12T07:40:00-07:00September 7th, 2013|Federal Dispensary Attacks, Legal Issues, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Medical Marijuana Roadmap Paved By DOJ Decision

Can Arizona Employers Fire an Employee for Marijuana Use if the Employee Holds a Medical Marijuana Card?

azcentral.com:  “I am a computer programmer and licensed medical marijuana patient. I only use it at night to help deaden the pain so I can sleep. My new job required me to take a drug test. Two weeks later, they told me I was being fired because I tested positive for marijuana. I showed my employer my prescription card, and later that day, they fired me for being incompetent. I had not received any complaints about my work, so I think they fired me because I use medical marijuana. What are my rights?

By |2013-09-06T07:21:09-07:00September 6th, 2013|Legal Issues, Stories & Articles|2 Comments

Anti-Drug Groups Say Eric Holder’s Position On Marijuana Is Wrong

Huff Post:  “Drug abuse prevention groups asked the U.S. Justice Department on Wednesday how it will know whether its acceptance of recreational marijuana laws in Washington and Colorado affects public health.  In a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder, the groups said the DOJ’s position is a mistake and they want to know how it will measure the states’ success in meeting enforcement priorities required as part of the federal acceptance.”

By |2017-02-12T07:40:00-07:00September 5th, 2013|Federal Dispensary Attacks, Legal Issues, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on Anti-Drug Groups Say Eric Holder’s Position On Marijuana Is Wrong

More Americans are using Marijuana

USA Today:  “Nearly 24 million Americans, about 9.2% of the population, use illicit drugs, and marijuana use is steadily increasing. As the nation takes a softer stance on marijuana, more Americans are using the drug, the National Survey on Drug Use and Health found.  The nationwide survey made public Wednesday found that 7.3% of Americans 12 or older regularly used marijuana in 2012, up from 7% in 2011.”

By |2013-09-04T20:20:08-07:00September 5th, 2013|Miscellaneous, Stories & Articles|Comments Off on More Americans are using Marijuana

New Online Pot Site Wants to Facilitate Connections between Pot Growers & Pot Resellers

An Arizona limited liability company named Wildwood Flowers, LLC, owned by Eddy Stamey is the owner of a new website called “Canna Connect.biz.  The site is “where Persons Authorized to Cultivate can connect confidentially with Licensed Resellers who want access to quality cannabis at wholesale pricing for resale to their patients or customers.”  The site’s business is a very “touchy” area and one that will undoubtedly cause the drug cops to join undercover.

By |2019-06-14T08:27:44-07:00September 4th, 2013|Stories & Articles|Comments Off on New Online Pot Site Wants to Facilitate Connections between Pot Growers & Pot Resellers
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