Eric Canori had a plan in case he was busted.
That stop and seizure led authorities back to Canori, who was arrested in a stash house with nearly $2 million in cash. He also gave up his gold stash, with police later recovering the gold that had been buried around Lake George.
After voluntarily giving up the gold and co-operating with the police, Canori spent just two years in prison. Now a free man, he’s written a memoir about his experiences and is attempting to enter New York’s legal cannabis industry.
Earlier this year, Chris Alexander, executive director of New York’s Office of Cannabis Management (OCM), told The New York Times that he expects that somewhere between 100 and 200 of the state’s first cannabis licences will go to individuals with past cannabis convictions or those who have family members with
Read full article on The Growth Op