
But waiting for a cannabis license from the Office of Cannabis Management, which has been accused of dragging its feet to get businesses licensed, proved too much for him to bear.
After linking up with cannabis cultivator Thomas Szulist three years ago to develop Innocence Cannabis – a microbusiness that would allow the pair to sell Szulist's cannabis crops directly to consumers – Dixon decided six months ago that he could no longer wait for the state to grant him the microbusiness license they needed to go into business together and dropped out of the project.
"The whole point of the name Innocence is that I was innocent for 27 years and the cannabis plant has always been innocent also," says Dixon, who is partnering with Thomas Szulist of Singer Farm Naturals to grow and sell cannabis on Lake Road in Appleton.
Western New York's second annual cannabis harvest is in the books, and farmers' feelings about the industry run the gamut.
After 26 years in prison, Valentino Dixon is hoping a new documentary about his case and an article in Golf Digest about his artwork will help set him
Art can be emotionally and psychologically liberating, and in those rare cases, it also can physically free the the artist. Valentino Dixon wi⁘
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