Chicago Sun-Times

Pot shop applicants sue state, say they were ‘forced’ to give up lottery spots

- BY TOM SCHUBA, STAFF REPORTER tschuba@suntimes.com | @TomSchuba

Two firms vying for lucrative pot shop permits filed suit Monday in Cook County court claiming state officials wrongfully pushed them to give up additional spots in this week’s third and final licensing lottery.

The complaint, brought by Suite Greens LLC and So Baked Too LLC, doesn’t seek to upend the licensing rollout, like another pending suit in Cook County is trying to do. Instead, the applicant groups want the state to give them all the chances they initially earned in Thursday’s long-delayed drawing.

“It doesn’t make sense how they can delay a year and a half and come back more incompeten­t than when we started,” said Britteney Kapri, a renowned poet from Uptown who’s partnered in So Baked Too. “The whole process has just been so confusing and aggravatin­g the whole time.”

Indeed, the business of dishing out the lucrative permits has grown increasing­ly convoluted.

Last September, Suite Greens and So Baked Too were among the 21 groups that initially earned the perfect scores needed to qualify for the upcoming lottery for 75 permits. But after that announceme­nt, the process was brought to a grinding halt when applicants cried foul and filed a series of lawsuits over the scoring.

Ultimately, the lottery was delayed as hundreds of hopefuls were given the opportunit­y to cure deficienci­es in their applicatio­ns in order to potentiall­y qualify. Gov. J.B. Pritzker later signed a bill in July creating two other lotteries, which recently designated 110 more licenses to existing applicants.

The latest lawsuit hinges on an arcane portion of the state’s legalizati­on law. Pritzker is named as a defendant, along with the state, the agency charged with dishing out the licenses and other officials.

A spokeswoma­n for Pritzker wouldn’t comment on the pending litigation, but she said his administra­tion “is committed to facilitati­ng a licensing process that is fair and equitable for all eligible participan­ts.”

“[The Illinois Department of Financial and Profession­al Regulation] will continue working towards a legal cannabis industry that repairs the harms of the past and creates a pathway to participat­ion

for Illinoisan­s from all background­s,” spokeswoma­n Jordan Abudayyeh said.

Under the law, the state is split into 17 unique regions where different numbers of licenses are allocated. In each region, a single principal officer can’t be included in more qualifying applicatio­ns than there are licenses available.

Kapri’s father, attorney Brendan Shiller, was listed as a principal officer on the applicatio­ns for both Suite Greens and So Baked Too, as well as another group that didn’t initially qualify for Thursday’s lottery, Canndid Spirit Too LLC. Rightfully anticipati­ng that Canndid Spirit’s revised scores would be perfect, that group and So Baked Too emailed Shiller’s resignatio­n to state officials on July 22 to avoid having too many qualifying applicatio­ns in certain regions, a conflict that would result in the loss of lottery spots.

While the emails were sent before the lottery participan­ts were announced less than a week later, as required under state law, the suit claims the IDFPR still “forced” the plaintiffs to abandon three total spots in the lottery.

Shiller, a known entity in Illinois’ cannabis world, declined to comment.

Suite Greens and So Baked Too both qualified for the two previous lotteries, but neither group has snagged a license yet. Woodlawn resident Diane Howard, an actress partnered in Suite Greens, said the bungled licensing process has been “beyond devastatin­g.”

As it stands, Suite Greens and So Baked Too both have nine spots in the lottery. Suite Greens now wants the state to grant it the two other chances it had, while So Baked Too wants one other spot restored.

“We want the state to recognize that they made a mistake and to fix it,” Howard said.

 ?? PROVIDED ?? Karley Stewart (from left), Diane Howard and Laura Bonet of Suite Greens, which is suing the state over the pot dispensary lottery process.
PROVIDED Karley Stewart (from left), Diane Howard and Laura Bonet of Suite Greens, which is suing the state over the pot dispensary lottery process.
 ??  ?? Britteney Kapri
Britteney Kapri

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