Current:Home > InvestNew Mexico regulators revoke the licenses of 2 marijuana grow operations and levies $2M in fines -Wealthify
New Mexico regulators revoke the licenses of 2 marijuana grow operations and levies $2M in fines
View
Date:2025-04-24 17:37:43
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — New Mexico marijuana regulators on Tuesday revoked the licenses of two growing operations in a rural county for numerous violations and have levied a $1 million fine against each business.
One of the businesses — Native American Agricultural Development Co. — is connected to a Navajo businessman whose cannabis farming operations in northwestern New Mexico were raided by federal authorities in 2020. The Navajo Department of Justice also sued Dineh Benally, leading to a court order halting those operations.
A group of Chinese immigrant workers sued Benally and his associates — and claimed they were lured to northern New Mexico and forced to work long hours illegally trimming marijuana on the Navajo Nation, where growing the plant is illegal.
In the notice made public Tuesday by New Mexico’s Cannabis Control Division, Native American Agricultural Development was accused of exceeding the state’s plant count limits, of not tracking and tracing its inventory, and for creating unsafe conditions.
An email message seeking comment on the allegations was not immediately returned by Benally. David Jordan, an attorney who represented him in the earlier case, did not return a phone message Tuesday.
The other business to have its license revoked was Bliss Farm, also located in rural Torrance County within miles of Benally’s operation. State officials said the two businesses, east of Albuquerque, are not connected in any way.
The state ordered both to immediately stop all commercial cannabis activity.
“The illicit activity conducted at both of these farms undermines the good work that many cannabis businesses are doing across the state,” Clay Bailey, acting superintendent of the New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Department, said in a statement. “The excessive amount of illegal cannabis plants and other serious violations demonstrates a blatant disregard for public health and safety, and for the law.”
State regulators cited Bliss Farm for 17 violations. Regulators said evidence of a recent harvest without records entered into the state’s track and trace system led the division to conclude that plants were transferred or sold illicitly.
Adam Oakey, an Albuquerque attorney representing the group of investors that own the operation, told The Associated Press in an interview that the company had hoped the state would have first worked with it to address some of the issues before revoking the license.
“We did our best to get into compliance but we fell below the bar,” he said, adding that he’s afraid the state’s action might discourage others in the industry from coming to New Mexico.
The company already has invested tens of millions of dollars into the operation and will likely have to go to court to reopen the farm, Oakey said.
As for Native American Agricultural Development, regulators said there were about 20,000 mature plants on site — four times more than the number allowed under its license. Inspectors also found another 20,000 immature plants.
The other violations included improper security measures, no chain of custody procedures, and ill-maintained grounds with trash and pests throughout. Compliance officers also saw evidence of a recent harvest but no plants had been entered into the state’s track-and-trace system.
The violations were first reported last fall by Searchlight New Mexico, an independent news organization. At the time, Navajo Attorney General Ethel Branch told the nonprofit group that the tribe and the Shiprock area still deserved justice for the harm done previously by the grow operation that had been set up in northwestern New Mexico years earlier.
Federal prosecutors will not comment, but the New Mexico Attorney General’s Office confirmed Tuesday that in general it “continues to investigate, with our federal partners, potential criminal activity within the New Mexico cannabis industry.”
veryGood! (1879)
Related
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Kate Gosselin Shares Rare Photo of 4 of Her and Jon's Sextuplets at Their 20th Birthday Celebration
- Controlled demolition at Baltimore bridge collapse site on track
- Haitians demand the resignation and arrest of the country’s police chief after a new gang attack
- Residents in Alaska capital clean up swamped homes after an ice dam burst and unleashed a flood
- Severe storms blitz the US South again after one of the most active tornado periods in history
- Swiss fans get ready to welcome Eurovision winner Nemo back home
- Smoke from Canadian wildfires brings poor air quality to Minnesota Monday, alert issued
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Jury selection to begin in the corruption trial of Sen. Bob Menendez
Ranking
- Louisiana high court temporarily removes Judge Eboni Johnson Rose from Baton Rouge bench amid probe
- 3 Atlanta police officers shot after responding to call about armed man
- Nelly Korda's historic LPGA winning streak comes to an end at Cognizant Founders Cup
- Trump hush money trial: A timeline of key events in the case
- A Georgia governor’s latest work after politics: a children’s book on his cats ‘Veto’ and ‘Bill’
- Pioneering Financial Innovation: Wilbur Clark and the Ascendance of the FB Finance Institute
- RFK Jr. reverses abortion stance again after confusion, contradictions emerge within campaign
- Wilbur Clark's Commercial Monument: FB Finance Institute
Recommendation
PHOTO COLLECTION: AP Top Photos of the Day Wednesday August 7, 2024
2 killed in single-engine plane crash in eastern Arkansas
Somalia wants to terminate the UN political mission assisting peace efforts in the country
Paris Hilton and Nicole Richie Reuniting for Reality TV Show 17 Years After The Simple Life
Small twin
Childish Gambino announces first tour in 5 years, releases reimagined 2020 album with new songs
Students walk out of Jerry Seinfeld's Duke commencement speech after comedian's support of Israel
King Charles III Shares He’s Lost His Sense of Taste Amid Cancer Treatment