The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

How the Gaetz probe grew from sex traffickin­g to medical pot

- By Michelle L. Price and Michael Balsamo

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — When Rep. Matt Gaetz vacationed in the Bahamas in 2018, he was joined by a doctor who donated to his campaign and a former colleague in the Florida Legislatur­e.

The Republican congressma­n, Dr. Jason Pirozzolo and Halsey Beshears were united in their enjoyment of politics, fancy travel and the company of beautiful women. They also had another mutual interest: Florida’s $1.2 billion medical marijuana industry.

The Bahamas trip is a central element of a federal investigat­ion surroundin­g Gaetz that has suddenly endangered his political career. What began as an inquiry into sex traffickin­g and whether Gaetz paid women and an underage girl in exchange for sex has grown into a larger review of public corruption, according to people familiar with the investigat­ion.

Investigat­ors are looking at whether Gaetz and his associates tried to secure government jobs for some of the women, the people said. They are also scrutinizi­ng Gaetz’s connection­s to the medical marijuana sector, including whether Pirozzolo and others sought to influence legislatio­n Gaetz sponsored. The investigat­ion includes legislatio­n from 2018, when Gaetz was in Congress, and earlier work in the Legislatur­e, according to one of the people.

Pressure on the congressma­n could build in the coming weeks as Joel Greenberg, a Gaetz associate who has been accused of traffickin­g a minor for sex, faces a May 15 deadline to strike a plea deal with prosecutor­s. If he does, Greenberg may be pressed to cooperate with federal investigat­ors and deliver damaging informatio­n against Gaetz.

None of the people on the trip to the Bahamas has been charged with a crime. Gaetz has vehemently denied any wrongdoing and has retained high-powered lawyers.

A spokesman for Gaetz said Saturday that Gaetz “is a long-time policy expert on marijuana liberaliza­tion and passed legislatio­n on the matter as far back as 2013. Rep. Gaetz has never been influenced by outside groups to take a stance on any given position.”

Beshears and a lawyer for Pirozzolo declined to comment for this story.

The Associated Press spoke with more than 10 people familiar with the dynamic among Gaetz, Pirozzolo and Beshears. Three of the people had knowledge of the investigat­ion. They all spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not allowed to publicly discuss the ongoing investigat­ion.

Gaetz’s interest in medical marijuana dates back nearly a decade, when he was a member of the Florida House of Representa­tives. Well before he would gain national attention for his steadfast support of Donald Trump, Gaetz would carve out an unusual reputation in Tallahasse­e as a Republican who wanted to liberalize marijuana laws.

In February 2014, Gaetz co-sponsored the first state effort to allow marijuana for medical use. His proposal

allowing the use of a nonhalluci­nogenic marijuana extract was limited to patients with cancer or a severe form of epilepsy and slowly earned the support of his father, Don Gaetz, who was then serving as president of the Florida Senate and said he was “being pummeled” by his son about supporting it.

Gaetz cast his proposal as a pared-down alternativ­e to a statewide ballot measure that would have broadly legalized medical marijuana. Gaetz’s law was approved with broad bipartisan support and signed into law by Republican Gov. Rick Scott in June 2014, while the statewide measure narrowly failed at the ballot box that November.

The day Gaetz’s measure was up for a final debate and vote in the Florida House, both Pirozzolo and Beshears were on the floor.

Beshears was a fellow Republican member of the Legislatur­e who joined Gaetz to support the legislatio­n. Pirozzolo, an Orlando hand doctor and pilot, was there serving as the physician of the day for the lawmakers — a role he would frequently take on by flying his own plane to Tallahasse­e.

Once the legislatio­n passed, it created lucrative new opportunit­ies for Beshears’ family and Pirozzolo.

The long-standing nursery owned by Beshears’ family was awarded one of five highly coveted licenses to cultivate and dispense medical marijuana.

The legislatio­n was written to specify — and restrict — who could win such a license. An amendment added by another lawmaker in the state House limited the pool of applicants to nurseries that had been in

continuous business for 30 years and had an inventory of 400,000 or more plants.

The Beshears family nursery, joining with two other growers, met that standard.

The Tampa Bay Times reported in 2014 that Beshears had failed to file a conflict of interest report when he voted on the bill, and the lawmaker who sponsored the amendment wanted to “err on the side of limiting who could qualify now” when embarking on such a new industry. More licenses have since been awarded, but the industry is still tightly controlled.

Another amendment added to the 2014 legislatio­n the day Pirozzolo watched in the state House required dispensary applicants to employ a doctor as a medical director.

Eight days later, Pirozzolo started a consulting firm connecting marijuana businesses with medical directors, the Orlando Sentinel reported. He later co-founded a group called the American Medical Marijuana Physicians Associatio­n, which advocates for doctors who recommend medical cannabis.

Gaetz has spoken at least twice at the associatio­n’s annual conference­s, including an appearance with longtime Trump confidant Roger Stone, according to the group’s social media posts and the recollecti­ons of a member.

With recommenda­tions from Gaetz and Beshears in 2018, Pirozzolo was appointed by the current governor, Republican Ron DeSantis, to serve on a board that runs Orlando Internatio­nal Airport. In 2019, he stood next to DeSantis on an airport tarmac and greeted Trump as he arrived in Orlando to kick off his reelection campaign, according to video posted online by a Sentinel reporter.

Two years after Gaetz’s first medical marijuana law, he sponsored another measure in the Legislatur­e to expand on it, allowing neardeath patients to use nonsmokabl­e marijuana of all strengths and doses.

The day it came up for a vote in the state House, Beshears voted for it, and Pirozzolo witnessed it, again serving as the doctor of the day.

By the time Gaetz was in Congress in 2018, he introduced legislatio­n that would increase the number of entities that would conduct cannabis research. The legislatio­n included provisions similar to what Pirozzolo’s group was pushing to also expand research.

Nearly five months later, the men would meet in the Bahamas.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE-ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., attends a House Judiciary committee hearing at the Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, April 14.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE-ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., attends a House Judiciary committee hearing at the Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, April 14.

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