An open-government advocate is suing the Florida Department of Health, saying the agency is wrongfully withholding public records related to the stateâs awarding of licenses to grow medical marijuana in the state.
Michael Barfield, a Sarasota-based paralegal, filed his initial lawsuit last Wednesday in Leon County Circuit Civil court. This week, however, he filed an emergency motion for an immediate hearing as allowed under Floridaâs public records statute.
Barfield, also vice president of the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida, is being represented by his employer, attorney Andrea Flynn Mogensen.
She also represented a group of news media organizations who sued Gov. Rick Scott and other state officials for breaking the stateâs open meetings law in removing former Florida Department of Law Enforcement head Gerald Bailey from office. That case settled out of court.
In the complaint filed against the Health Department, Barfield said the agency refuses to produce certain records connected to applications filed by Alpha Foliage and Redland Nursery to grow medicinal pot.
The agency said the records were exempt from public disclosure, according to the suit.
Alpha Foliage, of Homestead, received the license to grow ânon-euphoricâ medical cannabis in the stateâs southwest region. Redland Nursery, also in Homestead, applied but lost.
Five licenses in all, one for each growing region of the state, were awarded Nov. 23 and have since spurred 13 administrative challenges. Redland filed two of those challenges, records show.
On Dec. 4, Barfield filed a written public records request for the companiesâ applications, he said in his complaint. He did not disclose why.
On Dec. 10, a department representative said Barfield could have âredacted,â or edited, copies of the applications, but the uncensored versions were off limits under âtrade secretsâ and other exceptions.
Specifically, the exempted info included âsecurity plans, Social Security numbers, bank account numbers, fingerprints, federal income tax information, background screening information (and) trade secrets,â according to the departmentâs response to Barfieldâs request, attached as an exhibit to the lawsuit.
The lawsuit seeks a court order declaring that the exemptions âdo not apply to the requested recordsâ as well as costs and attorney fees.
Mogensen reportedly received $55,000 in the Bailey case settlement. She is out of the office this week.
Health Department spokeswoman Mara Gambineri told FloridaPolitics.com the agency was served with the lawsuit Tuesday afternoon but the department otherwise does not comment on pending litigation.