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In the weeds: Why did the Colorado health department put a Texas felon on its pot advisory committee?

The 100,000-plus medical marijuana patients now in Colorado have an official representative: Ken Weaver. That's according to the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, which appointed Weaver to be the patient representative on the state's twelve-person Medical Marijuana Registry Committee, which will recommend how the department should implement Colorado's new medical marijuana laws.

This is just the latest item on a long, colorful resumé that stretches far beyond Weaver's reported desire to fight for fellow patients. These days, he associates with dispensary owners and marijuana lobbyists — but he previously owned a violation-prone Dallas power company; spent time in prison for stealing a plane, among other things; and made up that resumé.

Weaver did not respond to repeated phone calls from Westword. "He's probably on a plane somewhere," said a worker at the Farmacy, a company with apparent ties to Weaver and three dispensaries in the Denver area.

Weaver says he's a survivor of Hodgkin's lymphoma, according to Kristen Thomson, a political consultant who lobbies on behalf of dispensaries, including the Farmacy. "I met Ken at the Capitol during the hearings about the new laws, and he was really one of the more reasonable patients," she says. "If you went to any of the hearings, you'd know that patient seat on the committee was probably the most controversial to fill. If [the health department was] familiar with someone who wasn't screaming as a patient from the street, it was probably good to have that voice."

Other than noticing his Texas drawl, Thomson says, she doesn't know anything about where Weaver came from.

It took a couple of newspaper reporters to unravel that story. According to the Dallas Morning News, from 2006 until last year, Weaver owned Freedom Power, a company known for cutting off customers' electricity in the middle of summer, racking up the highest number of consumer complaints in Texas and violating more state rules than nearly any other utility company in the state. The paper reported that Weaver had constructed a bogus background that included imaginary college degrees, false football exploits and fake construction-executive credentials in order to enter the newly deregulated Texas telephone market in 1996. Ten years later he got into the electricity business when he bought Freedom Power — though he never changed the power company's license to list himself as owner. Dabbling in recently deregulated industries paid off for Weaver; profits from these ventures netted him a mansion, a penthouse and a fleet of nineteen trucks — and he began competing in truck and stock-car races, including NASCAR and Automobile Racing Club of America events.

But Weaver was actually a college dropout who'd spent time in prison for stealing cars as well as a single-engine Cessna. When authorities found the Cessna in south Texas in 1986, it was filled with money, a rifle, a set of scales and maps of Mexican airstrips.

After Morning News reporters first questioned him about his past in the summer of 2009, Weaver filed documents noting that he'd sold his share of both the telephone and power companies. In the story, which came out on October 5, 2009, Weaver admitted to constructing a fantasy life and promised to make things better. "But to be honest," he added, "my real instinct right now is to go hide under a rock."

Or move to Colorado. Four days before the article came out, Michelle Piwonski, a woman who'd shared an address with Weaver in Dallas, filed incorporation papers for Rocky Mountain Farmacy, joining entrepreneurs from across the country who were flocking to this state, lured by a new industry — medical marijuana — with very little regulation.

Weaver is not affiliated with the Farmacy, Piwonski insists. "He's not on any licenses, nothing," she says. "He is just a patient advocate." As for the Morning News story, it was "totally biased," she asserts. "None of that has anything to do with what he's doing right now."

And what is he doing right now? According to the Uptown Alliance's website, in November 2009 Weaver and Piwonski attended an Uptown neighborhood meeting and represented themselves as "the owners of the Rocky Mountain Farmacy."

Thomson says she'd associated Weaver with the Farmacy because he and Piwonski would attend hearings together at the Capitol, as well as meetings of Coloradans for Medical Marijuana Regulation (CMMR), a lobbying group that played a role in the development of the new medical marijuana laws. "When I first met them, I thought they were brother and sister," says Thomson.

The health department received roughly a hundred applications for the nine public positions, divided by affiliation and interest group, on the Medical Marijuana Registry Committee. The members, announced last week, include patient Weaver, primary caregiver Michael Marcella, dispensary owner Jill Lamoureux-Leigh, medical marijuana-recommending physician Rita Starritt, addiction specialist Christian C. Thurstone, chronic-pain expert Daniel Bennett, oncology specialist Daniel Bowles, Denver police officer Ernest Martinez, Colorado District Attorney's Council executive director Ted Tow, Jefferson County Public Health Department executive director Mark Johnson, Medical Marijuana Registry director Bob O'Doherty and Colorado Chief Medical Officer Ned Calonge.

Asked about Weaver's background, health department spokeswoman Lori Maldonado sent a detailed statement: "The department did not request information from any applicants regarding past criminal activity. We sought members who could represent relevant stakeholders for the rules required to be passed under HB 1284 and SB 109. The process included requesting a resumé and checking references, and the selection criteria included selecting individual(s) who are engaged in the process and, as stated above, who represent the stakeholders, in this case, patients. Also, we wanted to achieve some level of geographic diversity."

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  • screwed by those guys! 07/02/2011 9:41:00 PM

    I know Michelle and Ken. I know thier kids,( Michelle's daughters & Kens family he abandoned). They are all but maried and live together in thier penthouse condo, that they sold from wht I can gather in The Mansions on Turtle Creek, in dallas. These guys are hustlers. Don't be fooled by her "I just share a po box" crap. He uses his money and con skills, and she is the face, the front, the blockaid...... These guys are total scum. I cant believe they still have 2 of thier 3 dispensaries open. I have to admit, her writing skills sure seem to candy doat well. Way to go Michelle! you guys are as FAKE as the two nut jobs running our country!!!!! THIEF! LIAR! SCUM!

  • Michelle Piwonski 08/04/2010 6:38:00 PM

    First of all Joel Werner...YOU need to get the facts straight if you are going to write an article! Did they not teach you that in journalism 101? I guess you were trying to get something out quick before you did enough research to really get the facts!! Typical for a "wannabe" journalist! Second...PCI does not stand for what you stated in this article and again I told you not to put in your own opinion as you have in this article! Third,I am friends with Ken Weaver. In Dallas I merely shared a mailing address as many people do (I guess that is a crime in your book)....Not that I have to explain myself to you or anyone for that matter! I am a colorado native and having my father pass away from cancer less than two years ago...made me decide to get into this industry and fight for patients rights! Lastly, I am the sole owner of Rocky Mountain Farmacy...I am tired of people trying to associate other people with my company as many have tried to do! If you are going to print an article and do like you said you were going to do (get both sides of the story)then do it...don't just talk about it because talk is cheap.......and I have patients to care for!

  • Stihgnob 07/31/2010 6:40:00 AM

    Does not pass the smell test. This appears to be corruption. FOLLOW THE MONEY.

  • 07/29/2010 5:53:00 PM

    the CDPHE proves over and over how they loath medical marijuana patients. Picking this guy was a failure on their part. They need to re-pick.

  • 420Colorado 07/28/2010 11:48:00 PM

    That is just beyond awesome www.420.co if you

 
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