Detroit Metro Times just ran a feature on my new memoir, Capone of Cannabis — a story about Michigan’s early cannabis “legalization” years that didn’t feel legal at all. It was raids, seizures, intimidation, and a system that treated patients and operators like targets, not citizens who followed the will of voters. As I told Metro Times, it was “too many guns and too many raids,” and that’s exactly what this book documents — the legal limbo they used to crush the first wave of entrepreneurs who tried to do it out in the open.
If you want the article, read it here:
New book recounts how Michigan’s early cannabis entrepreneurs were crushed by raids, seizures, and legal limbo
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And if you want the full, unfiltered story — the stuff that doesn’t fit in a news write-up — grab the book at
CaponeOfCannabis.com.





