Empire Cannabis Club files for bankruptcy, claims $3.4 million of debt | Where to buy Skittles Moonrock online
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The Empire Cannabis Club, known for its bold fight to keep open an unlicensed cannabis operation in New York City, has filed for bankruptcy. The Elfand Organization, also known as Empire Cannabis Clubs, filed for Chapter 11 in the Southern District of New York on Dec. 2.
Empire listed six addresses for the company and claimed its assets were in the $1 million to $10 million range. The debts totaled over $3.4 million and were outlined as follows:
- 424 Broadway lease $584,155
- BNN Fulton Flushing lease $327,642
- 833 Manhattan Ave. lease $201,108
- 268 Metropolitan lease $65,850
- NYSIF Workers Comp policy $95,369
- ADT security contract $8,152
- Spectrum $4,652
- ConEd $271
- Iakovos Inc. lease $12,000
- 172 Allen Realty lease $60,000
- Vlasic Labs products $4,137.50
- IRS Treasury Dept. taxes $5,058.83
- NY State taxes $250,157.78, $1,514,356.08 & $290,315.05
Empireās legal state of mind

Green Market Report previously wrote that Empire Cannabis Clubs was suing New York closing its unlicensed cannabis stores which had operated since 2021.Ā Empireās five locations in New York City were raided on Aug. 29, with law enforcement officials entering each shop within the same 30-minute timeframe, owner Jonathan Elfand told Green Market Report. The New York Sheriffās Department ordered all five stores closed as part of New York Cityās Operation Padlock.
The Empire stores have remained closed since the raids, but the chain is still doing business via delivery for its roughly 196,000 members, Elfand said at the time. Elfand and Empire have never shied away from the fact that the five clubs have been providing members with high-quality marijuana goods, but the legal argument theyāre relying on is that the business model is fully compliant under the 2021 state law that legalized recreational cannabis, the Marihuana Regulation and Taxation Act (MRTA).
āAs long as youāre not profiting, you donāt need a license,ā Elfand said. Empire has always operated as a not-for-profit organized under New York state law. āSo at my club, all I do is I facilitate members to be able to acquire (cannabis goods).ā
Details of how the club works are outlined on Empireās website, but the basic business model revolves around a simple membership fee of $24.99 per month. With that monthly payment, Empire members can acquire cannabis from any of the clubs with zero markup.Ā That, Elfand said, is the key to Empireās legality.
Elfand also said that since its founding, it has paid āmillionsā in taxes to the state and city, the suit asserts and had a payroll of $3.2 million last year for roughly 75 employees. Gross sales at Empire reached $2.5 million in the second quarter of 2024, according to court records.
Operation padlock
Since that case was filed in September, a judge declared Operation Padlock unconstitutional in October for one dispensary called Cloud Corner. Cloud Corner was allowed to reopen but it wasnāt clear if that ruling applied to other unlicensed operations. This week, New Yorkās cannabis czar Dasheeda Dawson told Green Market Report that most of the unlicensed shops closed down by the New York City sheriff have remained shuttered, which has been a boon to the legal dispensaries.
āOperation Padlock continues. We meet on a regular basis ⦠with the enforcement agencies. Weāre at a point now where weāve had success in really shutting down a good amount of the stores,ā Dawson said. āMostly, weāre not seeing those reopen.ā

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