Las Vegas Review-Journal

Regulators say pot lab altered results

Board targets facility suspended two times

- By Colton Lochhead Contact Capital Bureau Chief Colton Lochhead at clochhead@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @Coltonloch­head on Twitter.

CARSON CITY — A marijuana testing lab was intentiona­lly passing tainted cannabis products that should have failed and inflating THC results for clients, state regulators said in a complaint Tuesday.

The Cannabis Compliance Board filed the complaint against Cannex Nevada LLC (also known as RSR Analytical­laboratori­es),alasvegas-based testing facility that the state has twice suspended since 2017 for failing to follow state regulation­s and whichwasth­esubjectof­twohealth advisories in 2019 and 2020 after it allowed tainted products to pass and be sold in retail dispensari­es.

“Rather than protecting consumers through accurate and honest testing, Cannex implemente­d testing processes that were designed to protect the monetary assets of their clients without regard for consumer safety,” the complaint said.

Regulators are asking the board to revoke the company’s marijuana business licenses, impose a fine of $62,500 and ban the company from the industry for nearly 10 years.

Cannex’s managing member, Ric Rushton, could not be reached for comment Tuesday. The Cannabis Compliance Board said that it “does not comment on pending disciplina­ry matters.”

Dozens of violations

According to the complaint, which lists dozens of violations found by state inspectors, Cannex had been performing unauthoriz­ed retesting for clients “with the intent to pass products that should have failed” tests for microbials and heavy metals, and “engaging in practices designed to inflate THC potency.”

The state suspended Cannex’s license in December 2019 after discoverin­g dozens of products that the lab had given a passing result and were being sold in dispensari­es never should have made it to the stores as they contained high levels of yeast and mold, prompting the state to issue a series of public health warnings about the products.

The complaint said it found 232 instances of unapproved retesting of products that had initially failed testing for microbials.

“Cannex’s microbial retesting practices resulted in the release of multiple cannabis products for sale to the public when they should have in fact failed testing,” the complaint said.

According to the complaint, Cannex had been suspended before in 2017 after inspectors found the company to be inflating THC results.

Inspectors noted these repeated practices being done for five of Cannex’s clients: THC Nevada, Silver Sage Wellness, ACC Industries, Prime Cannabis and Integral Associates (the parent company of Essence dispensari­es).

Herbal Care ban

The board also approved a settlement that ends a protracted battle with a Reno marijuana cultivator, with the company agreeing to give up its license and the state imposing a seven-year ban from the industry on its owners.

As part of the agreement, the owners of Herbal Care will be allowed to sell their state marijuana license and certificat­e, and will be barred from operating a cannabis business in the state until 2027. The owners also agreed to pay a fine of $125,000.

The Department of Taxation, which regulated marijuana in the state until

the Cannabis Compliance Board took over last summer, suspended Herbal Care’s license in September 2018 after it said an investigat­ion found numerous violations including failed record keeping and improper packaging, labeling and plant tagging.

The board also approved several other settlement agreements with marijuana companies or agent cardholder­s for various violations.

Fidelis Holdings LLC, which holds marijuana cultivatio­n licenses, agreed to a fine of $70,000.

 ?? Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-journal ?? A marijuana testing lab was passing tainted cannabis products that should have failed and inflating THC results for clients, state regulators said Tuesday.
Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-journal A marijuana testing lab was passing tainted cannabis products that should have failed and inflating THC results for clients, state regulators said Tuesday.

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