Heirs and business partners of a Black farmer who vied for a potentially lucrative medical cannabis license are trying to persuade an appeals court that state health officials were wrong to scrap his application because he died before the licensing process was complete.
The application of the late Moton Hopkins, a Marion County farmer, and rancher, received the highest score of a dozen applicants who sought the license. An administrative law judge in February upheld the Department of Health’s decision to reject the application because the farmer died before officials finished evaluating the submissions.
But lawyers for Hopkins’ heirs and partners on Tuesday filed a brief at the 1st District Court of Appeal seeking to overturn Administrative Law Judge Gary Early’s decision.
Hopkins was among applicants who sought a medical cannabis license earmarked for a Black farmer who was a “recognized class member” in class-action lawsuits over lending discrimination by the federal government, known as “Pigford” cases.
Read more at orlandoweekly.com