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Empire Cannabis Clubs, a prominent and infamous staple in New York City that describes itself as âa concierge service dedicated to supplying the highest-end cannabis products at prices you can afford,â saw two of its locations raided yesterday by the state.
Officials seized property, a brief standoff took place between inspectors and club staff, and two of Empireâs owners, Lenore and Jonathan Elfand, were handcuffed.
Both were released within hours; Empireâs operations will return to âbusiness as usualâ tomorrow; and the company now has the legal battle it has expected â and craved â over the stateâs approach to cannabis enforcement, said Empire attorney Steve Zissou Tuesday night.
Empire sprung up in September of 2021 âpursuant to the safe harbor provision of the MRTA,â Zissou wrote in a recent guest column. That provision, he said, âpermits non-compensatory transfers of cannabis and the use of âpropertyâ to facilitate such transfers.â
Though the Office of Cannabis Management sent Empire a cease-and-desist letter last summer, the agency was not involved in the raids on Tuesday. The enforcement was led instead by the Department of Taxation and Finance, Zissou said.
The attorney spoke with NY Cannabis Insider in-depth about his clientsâ experience on Tuesday and what Empire plans to do next â in court.
This Q&A has been lightly edited for length and clarity.
Walk me through exactly what happened today.
Agents, police officers, whatever â it wasnât clear right away who they were â showed up at two locations: at Chelsea, that was the first shop that was opened in September 2021; and then the Lower East Side shop.
Since itâs a private club, the employees are trained that if anyone shows up demanding entrance and theyâre not a club member, or somebody seeking to join, theyâre not allowed in. Theyâre supposed to call me or the owners.
That led to a standoff because the officials took the position that they didnât need a warrant. Actually, it got even worse than that.
At first, there were members in the club who the agents claimed were being held as hostages. The club members said, âno, no, weâre perfectly fine, weâre happy in here,â and that caused the agents to back down.
I said, âjust have the agents call me, like they would normally do.â They didnât call. But they gave Lenore the name of an attorney at the Department of Taxation and Finance.
Howâd that conversation go?
I was in court. My wife, whoâs also a lawyer and an attorney for Empire, made the call to her to say, âlook, I know you need a warrant.â The reaction she received sounded a lot like the Treasure of the Sierra Madre, essentially, âwe donât need no stinkinâ warrants.â
My wifeâs much more centered than I am. I tend to be a hot head on occasion. She said, âwell, yeah, you do need a warrant: itâs a private club, we donât sell cannabis, we pay taxes, and thereâs a 21-and-older membership requirement.â
The attorney from the Department of Taxation said sheâd have her team âarrest all the employees in the shops and charge them with obstruction of justice.â
Thereâs been a lot of fear among observers and folks in the legislature about creating this new police force that was created in the new regs. And this attorney really went full, âIâm going to lock up everybody.â
What happened next?
Jonathan and Lenore didnât want the employees to get involved, so Jonathan went to one shop and Lenore went to another shop to take the hits, so to speak. To say, âyou canât come in without a warrant.â
And Lenore was promptly arrested and taken to the 7th Precinct.
For obstruction of justice?
Yes. Which on its face is going to give rise to a wonderful false arrest case.
Because again, the statute these officials claim to be complying with says, âif youâre denied entrance, you can go to a Supreme Court judge in the county where the shop is located and apply for permission to enter the premises.â And of course they didnât do that.
A few hours later, Lenore was given a desk appearance ticket with a date to return, and charged with obstruction of justice.
And Jonathan?
Jonathan was arrested. They went into the shop without a warrant. He had cuffs on for about half an hour, they helped themselves to whatever it is they thought they were authorized to take, then took the cuffs off Jon, and thatâs it.
Did either of them learn any details about the reasoning behind the raid throughout the day?
While Lenore was in custody, one of the agents said to her, âwe really only came because youâre not paying taxes.â And Lenore says, âof course weâre paying taxes â we paid almost $3 million in taxes last year alone. And you know it because we have a tax ID number, we have signs in the shop saying taxes have to be collected.â
So thatâs how the day has unfolded.
If OCM isnât involved, is there no enforcement hearing?
Thatâs a good question. Why wasnât OCM involved? They didnât put any of those stickers on the shop. By tomorrow morning, I may know something different. But it does not seem like one of those hearing cases.
So there was no sticker put on the door?
No.
Thereâs no notice of a hearing?
Correct.
They didnât seize products at one of the stores?
Correct.
And there are no fines, or talk of fines?
No.
So what was the purpose of this?
I have no idea.
Whatâs Empireâs legal argument going to be moving forward? Is it the false arrest lawsuit? Or are you planning on anything else?
No, maybe the false arrest will come later. But I do think the plan will probably include filing a lawsuit for a return of property on the ground that it was illegally seized. And I think thatâs probably a cleaner way to get before a court of law as opposed to one of the administrative hearings. No lawyer ever wants to litigate a serious issue in an administrative tribunal first.
So Iâd rather avoid that if possible. I think weâre going to probably use this as a vehicle to get into a Supreme Court sooner than later and have this issue decided.
Bring it on. Weâre ready.
Is it your ultimate goal to get into the Supreme Court over seizure of product but ultimately have it out about enforcement overall?
Yeah, of course, I think the issue is going to be about the business model, and does it survive the legislation?
And if not, is Empire entitled to damages? And by that, I mean that when you pass a statute as they did with the MRTA, and folks rely on the statute â invest money, time, and effort building something â and then they change it two years later, thereâs a concept known as detrimental reliance.
Thatâs when you rely on something to your detriment that the legislature then changes after acknowledging that your business model fits within the original law.
There are those considerations. Empire didnât get started yesterday â theyâve been involved openly, notoriously, they werenât hiding from anybody. They would speak to anyone. Iâve called OCM many times.
So, yeah, weâd like to litigate this issue sooner than later.
Whatâs going to happen tomorrow?
Itâs business as usual tomorrow.