By 420 Intel on Monday, 15 September 2025
Category: Cannabis News

NM State Employee Allegedly Ruins Cannabis Farm

A dramatic lawsuit out of northern New Mexico is shedding light on the unique challenges of running a cannabis farm in a state where historic infrastructure meets modern agriculture. Albuquerque Cannabis Corp. (ACC) is suing the state for $442,000, claiming a public employee accidentally destroyed its crop by flooding it with E. coli–tainted water from a centuries-old irrigation canal.

According to the complaint, a supervisor at Los Luceros Historic Site in Rio Arriba County allegedly left the gate of an acequia open during irrigation in August 2023. The resulting flood sent more than 650,000 gallons of water onto ACC's four-acre property, wiping out 850 plants, greenhouse equipment, and hundreds of pounds of cannabis flower. For any cannabis farm, such an event is catastrophic not only because of lost revenue but also because of the time and investment required to grow a high-input crop.

ACC had leased land next to Los Luceros, a 19th-century hacienda with irrigated pastures open to the public. The acequia at the center of the dispute is among the oldest in the region. While these ditches are part of New Mexico's cultural heritage, they can also create liability risks when they border a modern cannabis farm.

In court filings, ACC says the flooding lasted "several hours" and ruined plants just as they were entering the flowering stage—the point when a cannabis farm begins to see its investment pay off. Lab testing later confirmed the plants were contaminated with fecal bacteria, rendering them unsafe for sale.

Original link

Copyright

©420 Intel 

Related Posts