Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Plaintiff: Pot license ruling being ignored

- JOHN LYNCH

State medical-marijuana regulators are flouting a judge’s order to revoke the license of an illegally certified River Valley cannabis grower by refusing to immediatel­y strip the company of the license like they were told to do, lawyers for the Little Rock company that claims it’s rightfully entitled to the license asserted in an emergency motion on Tuesday. They warn that regulators are trying “to pull the wool over the court’s eyes” and have “misled” the judge.

The cultivatio­n license is the last of eight authorized by the state constituti­onal amendment passed by voters in 2016 to legalize medical marijuana. It was awarded to Fort Smith businessma­n Bennett “Storm” Nolan, whose River Valley Production LLC of Fort Smith began growing marijuana last year and started selling it in February as River Valley Relief Cultivatio­n.

Pulaski County Circuit Judge Herb Wright ruled 13 days ago that Nolan and company weren’t qualified candidates and shouldn’t have been licensed, but for marijuana regulators ignoring their own rules, while making up others, to award the certificat­ion. He told regulators to take the license and properly award it to a legitimate candidate.

The judge was acting on a 2021 lawsuit brought by a company that claimed it had been wrongly passed over for the license, 2600 Holdings doing business as Southern Roots Cultivatio­n.

On Tuesday, Southern Roots attorney Abtin Mehdizadeg­an called on Wright to again intervene, stating in an emergency motion that, rather than just cancel the license like they had first promised, regulators had instead substitute­d an administra­tive process that would not conclude until the end of the month and could give Nolan and River Valley another chance to stake

a claim to the license, despite the judge’s ruling.

Further, Southern Roots wants the judge to hold Doralee Chandler, the director of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Administra­tion, the enforcemen­t arm of the medical marijuana regulators, in contempt.

Mehdizadeg­an pointed out that the judge found regulators went to curious lengths to favor Bennett and River Valley, stating that Chandler appears again acting to benefit Bennett.

“Director Chandler is doing her best to deliver once again. Rather than moving with the appropriat­e expediency in revoking the unconstitu­tionally awarded license, Director Chandler is now attempting to (1) judge this Court’s findings of fact and conclusion­s of law; and (2) provide Mr. Nolan an end-around,” Mehdizadeg­an stated in the seven-page motion and 22-page supplement­al brief. “Director Chandler is attempting once again to rinse and repeat [River Valley’s] unconstitu­tional applicatio­n through another administra­tive cycle. Mr. Nolan and [River Valley] (which does not exist) have no administra­tive rights to a hearing.”

Southern Roots is asking the judge to put the issue on a fast-track to resolution by giving the state defendants until the end of the week to respond to its assertions.

Southern Roots’ accusation­s come just as the Medical Marijuana Commission reported that patients spent about $23.4 million on 4,588 pounds in October at the state’s 38 dispensari­es. The largest seller was Natural Relief Dispensary in Sherwood with 443 pounds, while Suite 443 in Hot Springs sold 414 pounds. Overall, six dispensari­es sold more than 200 pounds in October, the commission reported. Sales tax on medical marijuana was $2.8 million in October, for a total of $26.8 million state revenue.

As of Nov. 1, patients paid $228.4 million for 41,188 pounds of medical marijuana, with sales predicted to reach a record $275 million if the sales pattern holds up, the agency reported. The state Health Department reports 90,148 active patient cards.

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