The Columbus Dispatch

Rejected pot grower says felon scored state applicatio­ns

- By Randy Ludlow rludlow@dispatch.com @RandyLudlo­w

A company that failed to win a state license to grow medical marijuana is criticizin­g Ohio for hiring a man with an apparent felony drug conviction to score the applicatio­ns.

“The state of Ohio has a lot of explaining to do ... they hired a convicted drug dealer for $150,000 to score applicatio­ns for the Ohio medical-marijuana industry,” said Jimmy Gould, chairman of CannAscend Ohio, the rejected would-be cultivator.

“Did the Department of Commerce not think it important to check and report the fact that at least one of the scorers of the medical-marijuana control program had a criminal record for dealing drugs ... did they require a background check to get a license, but not to give a license?” Gould asked in a statement.

Applicants to grow medical marijuana were required to undergo criminal background checks. But the state’s request for proposals, which led to contracts for Trevor Bozeman and two other scorers, did not make it a requiremen­t to pass a criminal check for those scorers, records show.

Court records verified by The Dispatch show that a Trevor C. Bozeman was convicted of manufactur­ing, delivering and possessing drugs, with intent to manufactur­e or deliver, in Middleburg, Pennsylvan­ia in 2005.

The records do not provide details of the offense. They also show misdemeano­r charges of use and possession of drug parapherna­lia and possession of a small amount of marijuana for personal use, which were dismissed.

Bozeman, now 33 and of Brunswick, Maine, paid $2,131 in fines and costs and was placed on probation for three years, which court records show he successful­ly completed.

Ohio incorporat­ion papers show that a Trevor Bozeman formed iCann Consulting, with a Dublin residentia­l address, in late 2016. The Sawmill Road address that the company lists is a mailbox at a United Parcel Service store.

The company was one of three to receive a $150,000 state contract in June to score applicatio­ns submitted by those seeking licenses to grow medical marijuana on such factors as finances, operating plans and security. Paperwork that Bozeman filed with the state said he holds a doctorate in chemistry and had prior experience with marijuana-grow operations in California and had served as an adviser in other states.

Messages seeking comment from Bozeman were left Tuesday at two telephone numbers listed in his name.

Stephanie Gostomski, a spokeswoma­n for the Department of Commerce, said iCann Consulting appeared to meet all the requiremen­ts to receive the state contract and its scoring appeared to be done profession­ally.

CannAscend’s bid to win a medical-marijuana cultivatio­n contract for a Wilmington facility was rejected after it scored poorly in evaluation­s and failed to meet requiremen­ts, Gostomski said.

Gould said the situation reflected “significan­t irregulari­ties” that should be investigat­ed. He was a founder of Responsibl­eOhio, the group behind the failed 2015 ballot campaign to legalize recreation­al marijuana.

“This is the start of a billion-dollar industry and the fact that the start is marred by arbitrary and capricious irregulari­ties is troubling and deserves a thorough and deep review,” he said.

The state recently awarded licenses for both small and large medical-marijuana grow operations. Medical marijuana is expected to be available legally in Ohio in about a year.

Lt. Gov. Mary Taylor, a Republican running for governor, said in a statement that she is “outraged that a convicted drug dealer played a major role in determinin­g who was suitable to receive a license. At a minimum, the integrity of the process has been called into question and it is unconscion­able to imagine that this process would be allowed to continue until we have a full reckoning.”

State Rep. Larry Householde­r, a Republican from Glenford, said the state should “freeze the issuance of the medical-marijuana growers’ licenses until Ohioans can be assured this process has not been tainted.”

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