Gov. Tim Walz's choice to lead Minnesota's new cannabis office quit the job Friday, just a day after she was appointed, following revelations that she had sold illegal products at her hemp shop.
Erin DuPree told the DFL governor she would "not be going forward" as director of the Office of Cannabis Management. The Star Tribune had first reported on her hemp shop's sale of illegal products earlier in the day.
"Conducting lawful business has been an objective of my business career," DuPree said in a statement Friday evening. "However, it has become clear that I have become a distraction that would stand in the way of the important work that needs to be done."
Loonacy Cannabis Co., which DuPree founded in Apple Valley in July 2022, advertised and sold noncompliant vapes and edible products containing more THC than is legally allowed, according to the store's social media videos and online product listings that have since been deleted.
Lab results for the products, still visible on Loonacy's website, show that some contained elevated THC levels that are illegal and synthetic ingredients that are banned.
"We have a responsibility to assure Minnesotans that this emerging market will be safe, lawful, and well-regulated," Walz said in a statement Friday evening. "We're making progress toward implementing this work."
In a news release only a day earlier, Walz's office praised DuPree as a leader who has a record of "maintaining compliance with state laws and regulations." As director of the Office of Cannabis Management, DuPree would have been tasked with overseeing the creation of the state's legal marijuana market and the rules that govern it.
The blunder raises questions about how thoroughly the governor's office vets applicants. In July, Walz rescinded an appointment that he'd made to a state broadband task force after the Star Tribune questioned his office about the appointee's past domestic abuse allegations.