Worth a Look: MedMen as ‘A Cautionary Tale of American Wild West Capitalism”

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The entrance to MedMen’s West Hollywood store at 8208 Santa Monica Blvd.

“Lavish Parties, Greedy Pols and Panic Rooms: How the ‘Apple of Pot’ Collapsed.”  That headline on a story published by Politico doesn’t come close to saying it all about one of West Hollywood’s most controversial marijuana retailers.

The story takes a deep look into the launch of MedMen and its  initial embrace by everyone from former L.A. Mayor Anthony Villaraigosa, who served for a while on its board of directors, to our own former mayor (and current City Councilmember) John D’Amico, whose last campaign received a major donation from MedMen’s co-founder Adam Bierman.

MedMen has been labeled as one of the “Originals,” the four medical cannabis dispensaries in West Hollywood that failed in their applications for permanent recreational cannabis sales licenses and have been fighting to overturn the process that ruled them ineligible. The other three want to put a measure on the Nov. 3 ballot that would grant them permanent recreational sales licenses.

MedMen has taken the fight a step farther by filing a lawsuit in L.A. County Superior Court asking that a judge effectively void the lengthy application process, which attracted about approximately 300 applicants who paid fees totaling about $3 million. If successful, the lawsuit would make the existing medical dispensaries able to sell cannabis for recreational use.

Time and time again the West Hollywood City Council has postponed deciding whether to stand by its original independent license application review process or go ahead and great permanent recreational licenses to the Originals. In May, the Council  asked City Hall staffers to study the impact of the Originals ballot measure if it passes. Its passage would allow the merger of recreational and medicinal cannabis licenses, creating a market of 16 competitors in each of the two categories, which initially were limited to eight.

As Politico reports, MedMen “got hit with a class-action lawsuit from employees alleging labor law violations. Miffed investors sued the founders, accusing them of self-dealing and other underhanded tactics. A former chief financial officer filed a blockbuster complaint in a Los Angeles court accusing the founders of a slew of misdeeds, from manipulating MedMen’s stock price, to bank fraud, to seeking private intelligence groups to get dirt on their enemies, to calling an L.A. city councilman a ‘midget negro’ and making an illegal straw man contribution to a Nevada politician.

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“MedMen stands as a cautionary tale of American Wild West capitalism.”

The full story can be found by clicking here.

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michael
michael
3 years ago

An episode of THE PATRIOT ACT, hosted by Hasan Minhaj, does a good job of showing how mega-investors are crippling small pot growers and sellers. It’s on NETFLIX. John Boehner, formerly House Speaker, is now investing in canabis big time.

ACT UP
ACT UP
3 years ago

When I owned a business in West Hollywood, I knew for a FACT that while I paid Worker’s Comp premiums on my employees, liability insurance for my premises, federal income taxes, state income taxes, city business license fees, payroll taxes, Medicare taxes, and state SDI/SUI taxes, marijuana dispensaries were collecting cash-only from their customers and paying all of their employees “cash under the table” and were paying NONE of these. I deeply resented this double-standard. If my business has to pay taxes and obey California labor laws, the pot dispensaries do, as well. They are ALL CASH businesses for ONE… Read more »

Cool Guy 420
Cool Guy 420
3 years ago
Reply to  ACT UP

I think the better solution would be to allow these business access to traditional banks–which would require de-listing marijuana from the federal list of controlled substances, and could likely be done unilaterally by the president

James Francis
James Francis
3 years ago

It just shows how in a small city that exclaims access time the masses, but only benefits the wealthy elitists in business deals, does it once again get blindsided by those companies who are only in it for the greed and the bragging rights of manipulating city politics and a population of 36,500 locals. Then when said business gets pushback and think the rules don’t apply to them, they only follow their own rules not governed by a city do they seek legal maneuvers. Then why were we the voters asked to vote on this cannabis industry? For us and… Read more »

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