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Today My Cannabis Brand Launches In West Virginia, Where I Spent Years Behind Bars For Growing Medical Marijuana (Op-Ed)
Jul 11, 2025
Marijuana Moment
Marijuana Moment
*“Legalization is progress, but we won’t be satisfied until every cannabis 
prisoner is set free.”*
*By Ryan Basore, Redemption Cannabis and The Redemption Foundation*
A little over a decade ago, I was sitting in a federal prison in 
Morgantown, West Virginia, serving time for growing medical cannabis in 
compliance with Michigan’s state law. I wasn’t a trafficker. I wasn’t 
running guns or laundering money. I was a state-licensed caregiver using 
cannabis to help people with debilitating conditions. Then I became one of 
the thousands targeted during a time when the federal government treated 
medical cannabis providers like public enemies.
Today—July 11—my cannabis brand launches in the same town in which I spent 
years behind bars for growing medical cannabis.
As traumatic as that experience was, I knew I couldn’t let it deter me from 
doing what’s right. That’s what led me to found Redemption Cannabis, one of 
Michigan’s top-selling cannabis brands and one that supports those still 
serving time for nonviolent cannabis offenses.
Together with partners like Trulieve and Altvm, we provide cannabis 
products to patients and consumers across states like Michigan, Maryland, 
Oklahoma, Pennsylvania and now West Virginia, where I once wore prison 
tans. It’s a redemption story I’m proud of, but it’s also a privilege that 
too many others have been denied.
Despite widespread legalization across a majority of U.S. states, many in 
the U.S. remain incarcerated for cannabis offenses. Their “crime”? Often 
the same actions that built today’s billion-dollar cannabis industry. 
Legalization has crept forward, but justice has not.
I launched the Redemption Foundation in 2019 to change that. Through our 
programs, we’ve helped fund over 2,000 free expungements and provided 
direct financial support to federal cannabis prisoners across the country.
One of our core efforts is our commissary program, which puts up to $300 a 
month, the maximum allowed, on the books of people incarcerated for 
non-violent cannabis offenses. For someone earning $14 a month in prison 
wages, that support isn’t just helpful. It’s life-changing.
We also partner with organizations like the Weldon Project’s Mission Green 
and the Last Prisoner Project to expand our reach and impact. The goal 
isn’t just release, it’s restoration. That means helping people return to 
their communities, access housing, find jobs and reclaim their dignity.
But here’s the hard truth: Unless federal law changes, we will keep seeing 
these contradictions. The Controlled Substances Act still classifies 
cannabis as a Schedule I drug, a substance with high risk for abuse with no 
currently accepted medical use. Until that changes, people will keep 
getting sentenced, even as legalization spreads.
Even expungement isn’t enough. In many states, it isn’t automatic. People 
need attorneys, paperwork, court appearances and other resources that are 
rarely made accessible to them just to be able to live a normal life. They 
struggle to find work, obtain housing or move on with their lives. 
Meanwhile, a lucrative industry has emerged around cannabis, the 
foundations of which were put in place by pioneers who continue to suffer 
behind bars or remain locked out of the legal industry.
Those of us who now enjoy the ability to consume and profit from legal 
cannabis owe our freedom to the people who took risks when it wasn’t safe 
or legal to do so. We have to recognize that our prosperity is a result of 
their sacrifice.
That’s why 10 percent of all Redemption Cannabis licensing revenue goes to 
supporting those still incarcerated and to securing their release. When you 
buy our products, you’re not just consuming, you’re contributing to the 
pursuit of justice.
Redemption isn’t just our brand name. It’s our mission.
Legalization is progress, but we won’t be satisfied until every cannabis 
prisoner is set free.
*Ryan Basore is the founder of Redemption Cannabis and the Redemption 
Foundation, which supports cannabis prisoners and fights for restorative 
justice in the cannabis industry. He previously served a federal sentence 
for medical marijuana cultivation in Michigan.*
*Photo courtesy of Chris Wallis // Side Pocket Images.*
The post Today My Cannabis Brand Launches In West Virginia, Where I Spent 
Years Behind Bars For Growing Medical Marijuana (Op-Ed) appeared first on Marijuana 
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