OR: Hostile Takeover Of A Longtime Cannabis Icon

Katelyn Baker

Well-Known Member
Portland, Ore. - There have been news stories lately about investors getting taken to the cleaners. Cannabis dreamers that get an influx of cash for their venture, then whether maliciously or just bad luck, do not follow through, no one makes the promised profit and the debt does not get paid. Taking a chance on a new venture is a risk, and some people have found that out the hard way.

On the other hand, there are some very established cannabis companies that are not a risk for investors, and in fact can be a prime target to be taken advantage of.

The current upheaval of the Empower Clinics (formerly THCF Clinics) is one such tragic example.

"Everything I have worked for, everything I own, that's what they are taking from me," said Paul Stanford, Oregon cannabis icon.

"The activist formerly known as Paul Stanford"

Paul Stanford was fired June 10th. BLINDSIDED, he would say. He received a certified letter from S.M.A.A.R.T., the corporation he owns a majority of, telling him he was out.

For reasons wrought with legalese and plenty of supposition, the S.M.A.A.R.T. board of directors opted to remove him, without ever even calling a single shareholder or board of directors meeting.

On June 9th, the lawyers representing a Canadian/Israeli petroleum and natural gas company asked the Multnomah County Court in Portland for a TRO (temporary restraining order) against Paul Stanford to "stop imminent harm" and because they weren't able to "take the company public in August." That meant no access to his office, or his bank accounts.

The possible loss of future financial gain for these Canadians was apparently enough for the judge to agree, as she made her ruling in less than 20 minutes. LESS THAN 20 MINUTES.

"The Judge caused harm," Stanford insists. "Harm against an honest business. The impact is far reaching."

They gave the court $10,000 in bond, which is less than an day's average gross revenue for these multiple clinics, and the judge allowed them to remove Paul Stanford from his own company.

Paul Stanford was "hit" with another wave of potential personal destruction: They want him to stop using his name. His name.

They also want him to stop using "THCF" and The Hemp & Cannabis Foundation, which is an Oregon non-profit, and has nothing to do with their "deal".

"They haven't paid me a penny, but they've taken everything I've owned in my whole life," said Stanford.

The corporation doesn't mind capitalizing on the past 15+ years of Stanford's dedicated effort. Now, "the Canadians" also claim to own any/all websites that he's created.

If they want to build on the company's good will and increase connections, this is certainly an odd way to start. "Paul Stanford" is one of the most trusted names in cannabis around the globe.

He has been an cannabis activist since 1978, and started working on the Oregon Marijuana Initiative in 1984. He has never stopped. He opened the first clinic in 1999.

The Hemp and Cannabis Foundation (THCF) began in 1999 in Portland, Oregon, and with Stanford at the helm, evolved into the nation's premier physician's clinic, helping over 250,000 patients in 12 states become a certified medical cannabis patient.

Stanford wrote and paid to put Oregon's Measure 80 on the 2012 ballot to legalize cannabis for adults and hemp for fuel, fiber and food. Measure 80 garnered 47 percent of the November 2012 vote.

Paul Stanford is a globally-renowned expert and featured speaker at national and international cannabis conferences, forums, and festivals.

Stanford regularly participates in numerous events, most recently Expoweed Mexico, and the Kyoto Hemp Forum in Japan; as well as the Expogrow in Spain, the annual Great Midwest Marijuana Harvest Fest in Madison, Wisconsin, the Seattle HEMPFEST, the world's largest annual cannabis protestival, and many more.

That level of experience cannot be replicated, and will not cease to exist, regardless of whether he goes by a name.

23 Million Shares ...out of the nowhere into the here.

How could this happen? Paul Stanford is a smart guy; it makes no sense.

Right. In general, to maintain control of your business, you want to keep 51%, or more. It's also mandatory that the people you do business with are upfront, have the same vision for the future, and work with agreed-upon policy and procedure. In fact, there are rules about such things.

Paul Stanford believed these standards were well in hand when he accepted the offer from Adira Energy in 2015.

Stanford kept majority ownership with 51% of the shares, but received no money.

In June, he was surprised to discover that unbeknownst to him, 23 million shares had been added, and he'd lost majority control without even having a meeting.

In the complaint, they allege that "Stanford intentionally, and with an improper purpose and by improper means, interfered with plaintiffs' current contractual relationships with their customers, employees, independent contractors, and vendors by, among other things, directing employees not to communicate with plaintiffs' newly appointed management of the Subsidiaries; directing the Subsidiaries' accountant not to cooperate with the audit; and instructing vendors not to provide information to plaintiffs."

He steadfastly rebukes their allegations. "They are liars," he insists.

Instantly, Stanford's share in his own company was reduced to as low as 3%. According to Stanford's attorney, the issuance of 23 million shares being added is a deliberate attempt, done in bad faith, to dilute Stanford's shares in S.M.A.A.R.T.

On June 10, Paul Stanford formally objected to S.M.A.A.R.T. conducting a non-brokered private placement of 23,000,000 common shares at the price of .01087 CAD per share. He disputes the purported amount of his shares in S.M.A.A.R.T. along with the authority of Mr. Bajic to act on behalf of S.M.A.A.R.T.

What should the value of the shares be? More. According to attorney Jessica L. McConnell, the "new" offering price of each share directly conflicts with the value of the shares in S.M.A.A.R.T.'s historical financial statements, representations made to S.M.A.A.R.T.'s investors and Adira Energy, and presentations made directly to Paul Stanford.

Jessica McConnell, Stanford's attorney, says he has repeatedly made written demands formally calling for an initial shareholder meeting, and, to date, Mr. Bajic has refused to hold a shareholders meeting.

He also made a request for documents to be received no later than June 22; he said they made promises and refused to provide documents. Nothing has come through.

"They are refusing all discovery whatsoever," Stanford said.

The Takeover Puts Medical Privacy at Risk

Over a quarter of a million people have entrusted the Empower Clinics with their personal medical records since 1999. They expect their information to be protected.

Have the medical records of the Empower Clinics been sold? Unconfirmed sources say, Yes.

Ample Organics in California is the probable buyer, a data compliance company that works with medical marijuana businesses.

This is a shocking revelation. Hearing about private medical records being sold is like fingernails on a chalkboard.

The 270,000 records are estimated to be worth about $27 million, if sold.

David Dodge, M.D. has served as attending physician at the THCF (now Empower) clinics since 2004. He has seen thousands of patients, and is himself a patient of a different doctor at the same clinic.

On June 12, Dr. David Dodge made a formal request that "Empower Clinic and its new usurpers, SMAART (BC) and SMAART (Nevada), to be denied to his, and his patients medical records", or that they sign a promise with assurance that they will not share the medical records in any form, or that all his records be deleted.

"I have now been told, and believe, that the new usurpers of Empower Clinics intend to sell my patients' and my own private, confidential, HIPAA-protected records to other businesses," Dr. David Dodge wrote in his declaration.

"I will suffer irreparable harm and likely be inundated by commercial communications from strangers who have my medical records without my consent, as will each of my patients."

"This violation of my physician-patient right to confidentiality, my personal privacy rights and my patients' medical information's privacy causes me great anxiety. I object."

"George Soros and his minions" are the usurpers

In 2014, Stanford was working to pass Oregon's marijuana initiative. He was approached by a prospective Canadian investor, but declined the investment in lieu of a donation for the initiative. He told them if they came through with $400,000 for the Oregon Cannabis Tax Act petition campaign, he would work with them to "go public". "They created a debt for $550k, but, when the money arrived in mid-June, two weeks before the signature turn-in deadline, it was too late to qualify OCTA 2014," Stanford said. "And still, I personally haven't been paid a dime."

A rocky start perhaps, but still worth moving forward for the greater cause, which was to help more medical pati¬ents. The Canadians named the new Vancouver, BC-based corporation Stanford Medical, Agricultural and Applied Retail Technologies, Inc. (S.M.A.A.R.T. Holdings Inc.) in 2015. Then, in November 2015, the Canadians moved to merge with Adira Energy.

Adira is not a well-known name in the cannabis community, because it has nothing to do with cannabis. It's an Israeli gas and oil exploration company, listed in the Toronto stock exchange, owned in part by billionaire George Soros.

Ethan Nadelmann is drug policy advisor to George Soros, and backed a competing initiative petition campaign which became Measure 91. Though OCTA failed to qualify, Stanford had been in dozens of meetings drafting Measure 91, and campaigned for it in the Summer and Fall of 2014.

George Soros is pro-pot, and he is one of the 30 richest people in the world. He is notorious, dubbed "The Man Who Broke the Bank of England" for making a profit of $1 billion during the 1992 Black Wednesday UK currency crisis.

In 1994, with the philanthropic support of George Soros, Ethan Nadelmann founded the Lindesmith Center; that group merged into the Drug Policy Alliance six years later. Soros funds the nonprofit with roughly $4 million a year via his Foundation to Promote an Open Society.

According to The Washington Times, Soros has spent at least $80 million on the legalization effort since 1994, through a network of nonprofit groups.

This is the kind of backing that could make all the difference for the future of medical marijuana in America. Or so Stanford once hoped.

"If only I'd known this has always been a set up to take our data and stop my ability to hep fund political change," Stanford remarked regretfully.

"Now these Canadian usurpers have transferred our patients' private medical records to a Canadian marijuana data company called Ample Organics, outside the jurisdiction of US medical privacy laws," Stanford said.

A Fight for His Life

Paul Stanford has been fighting for other people's rights most of his adult life. Sure, he's had his trials and tribulations, and has faced the music himself many times. He's always come through the difficulties stronger than he was before.

This is a unique event. Most people never have to fight for their livelihood, let alone their very name.

Their game strategy is to "Out-lawyer" him, but they may be disappointed. These tactics may work with others, but not with Paul Stanford. He has a long history of survival and ultimate success. He says he will never give up.

Stanford says. "I'll never surrender to these lying swindlers."

That sounds like a promise.

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News Moderator: Katelyn Baker 420 MAGAZINE ®
Full Article: Hostile Takeover Of A Longtime Cannabis Icon
Author: Bonnie King
Contact: newsroom@salem-news.com
Photo Credit: None Found
Website: Salem News
 
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