The Columbus Dispatch

Calls to probe ex-drug dealer’s hiring grow

- By Randy Ludlow rludlow@dispatch.com @RandyLudlo­w

Ohio Auditor Dave Yost has joined the calls for the suspension of alreadygra­nted state licenses to larger medical marijuana growers so authoritie­s can investigat­e whether the hiring of a former drug dealer to score the applicatio­ns affected the award of licenses.

“This is an epic failure. I am outraged,” Yost said while calling for the Ohio Department of Commerce to promptly investigat­e the matter, perhaps by calling in Inspector General Randall J. Meyer.

“The only proper course of action is to freeze the process, and independen­tly review the evaluation and scoring from the ground up. And the administra­tion needs to explain how this drug dealer ended up telling the government how to run its fledgling medical marijuana program,” he said.

The controvers­y arose Tuesday when a company that failed to win a state license to grow medical marijuana criticized the state for hiring Trevor C. Bozeman, a man with a felony drug conviction, to help score the applicatio­ns.

The two-term Republican Yost, who is running for attorney general, said his staff is gathering informatio­n about those hired to review applicatio­ns and whether any “hiring errors impacted the grading of the license applicatio­ns.” But, the matter deserves attention in a more-rapid fashion than his office can deliver, he said.

“We can’t wait for a rear-view mirror audit. The Commerce Department needs to act today before this train leaves the station.”

In a statement, Department of Commerce spokeswoma­n Stephanie Gostomski said on Wednesday: “This was a careful, fair process which we fully and extensivel­y explained in advance and are glad to do again to anyone with questions or concerns.” She said previously that Bozeman and his firm met requiremen­ts to receive the state contract and its scoring appeared to be done profession­ally.

Yost said the medical marijuana program needs to resolve questions and proceed in a timely manner because “we have kids out there with epilepsy looking for relief.”

Yost’s attorney general opponent, Democrat Steve Dettelbach, also called for a investigat­ion, tweeting: “A convicted drug dealer was paid to help set up medical marijuana in Ohio! Did they think it was ‘relevant experience?!’ This needs to be thoroughly investigat­ed.”

Some gubernator­ial candidates and state lawmakers also have called for an investigat­ion.

Jimmy Gould, chairman of CannAscend Ohio, the rejected would-be cultivator, called the conviction of Bozeman, whose firm received a $150,000 contract to score the applicatio­ns of would-be medical marijuana cultivator­s, to the attention of reporters on Tuesday.

Applicants to grow medical marijuana were required to undergo criminal background checks. But the state’s request for proposals, which led to contracts for 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 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.

The records 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 successful­ly completed three years of probation. Bozeman has not responded to requests for comment.

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 has criticized the process and threatened legal action.

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.

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