Cannabis Development Company or CannDevCo is suing its former social equity partner Lucius Dwanye McDade, Jr. for reneging on a deal. CannDevCo claims in its lawsuit that it helped McDade to obtain a social equity license in the state and he returned the favor by dumping them. The civil action was brought in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois and filed on March 14.
How it started
In 2022 the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation announced a plan to issue 55 Conditional Licenses through a “Social Equity Lottery.” The social equity status had two conditions: residency in the state and some association with a cannabis conviction or the victim of a firearm injury. The case states that in early 2023, CannDevCo was introduced to McDade and they agreed to pursue a license together.
According to the complaint, CannDevCo agreed to develop and open a cannabis dispensary with McDade and pay McDade various sums, including:
- An initial cash payment upon McDade providing CannDevCo with all documentation needed to qualify for the Social Equity Lottery
- An annual salary of $40,000 to be paid quarterly each year the dispensary operates with 3% annual salary increases
- A payment of $150,000 to be paid if CannDevCo purchased the cannabis license from McDade in the future
CannDevCo claims it prepared, submitted and paid for McDade’s Lottery application for the central region of Illinois. In July, the team was informed it had been awarded a license, however, the team had to submit additional documentation. During that process it came to light that McDade had an unpaid tax bill, so CannDevCo paid the taxes he owed so the process could continue to move forward. CannDevCo alleges that during the process as they kept asking McDade for more documentation, he kept asking for more money. They claim the parties agreed that the funds he received would be advances from future income once the company was up and running.
Partner problems
Once the paperwork was in place, the team had to secure a location, and this is when the deal went off the rails, according to the complaint. They claim that McDade changed his telephone number and disabled his email so that CannDevCo could not contact him at all. Then, McDade, or someone acting on McDade’s behalf, apparently contacted the IDFPR and requested the removal of CannDevCo’s representative as a contact person for the LLC.
When CannDevCo found out McDade’s new phone number and was able to contact him, the parties agreed to a dinner in October 2024 to discuss the venture. McDade also demanded he be paid for his time to attend the dinner, which CannDevCo agreed to. McDade assured the team he was on board. However, from December 2024 and January 2025, he continued to demand more cash advances against future earnings, which the company paid.
The team then found a location for the dispensary and hired an architect. At this point, CannDevCo said it needed McDade to sign a new form and provide fingerprints as required by the state. Despite paying his expenses to get the fingerprints, McDade never followed through.
The complaint states that on March 2, McDade told CannDevCo he decided to work with someone else who was a “local person.” The CannDevCo team is based in New York. Despite signing a contract that he couldn’t see or transfer the license, McDade attempted to make a deal with someone else that would cause CannDevCo to loss all of its investment in the venture.
How it’s going
CannDevCo is asking the courts to keep McDade from working with another partner. They claim that the company can’t recoup its expenses unless it moves forward with the venture to open the dispensary. CannDevCo wants to be reinstated as the contact person for the venture with the state. The company also wants to be paid damages and be reimbursed for its legal fees.
2311000-2311777-https-ecf-ilnd-uscourts-gov-doc1-067132125174