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Thursday, October 17, 2024 at 5:04 PM
TriCity Insurance Agency

Area attorney, 2 others indicted in ‘Ghost licensing’ scheme to facilitate black-market marijuana operations

On April 2, 2024, a federal grand jury returned an eightcount Indictment, charging Matthew Alan Stacy, Chong Iu Phu (Phu), and Chanh Iu Phu (Chanh) with drug conspiracies.

On April 2, 2024, a federal grand jury returned an eightcount Indictment, charging Matthew Alan Stacy, Chong Iu Phu (Phu), and Chanh Iu Phu (Chanh) with drug conspiracies.

Additionally, the Indictment charges Stacy with one count of maintaining a druginvolved premises, Phu with four counts of maintaining a drug-involved premises, and Chanh with possession of marijuana with intent to distribute.

The public is reminded that these charges are merely allegations, and that the defendants are presumed innocent unless proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

The Indictment alleges that Phu, a real estate broker, and Stacy, an attorney, conspired to aid and abet marijuana traffickers in Oklahoma by making false and fraudulent representations on applications for state licenses to operate marijuana farms — all on behalf of their black-market marijuana trafficker clients.

Under Oklahoma law, to own and operate a medical marijuana grow, applicants must obtain a license through the Oklahoma Medical Marijuana Authority (OMMA) and register with the Oklahoma State Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs (OBN).

Oklahoma law also currently requires that any commercial marijuana grow is at least 75% owned by Oklahoma residents. The Indictment alleges that Phu and Stacy helped their clients evade these residency requirements and establish black-market marijuana farms.

Court documents allege specific instances where Phu and Stacy either purchased, or facilitated the purchase of, Oklahoma residents’ personal identifying information — which Phu and Stacy then used on applications for OMMA licenses and OBN registrations that they submitted on behalf of persons who did not qualify to serve as majority owners and operators of commercial marijuana grows.

The Indictment specifically alleges that straw owners listed by Phu included an employee, as well as Phu’s parents.

The Indictment further alleges that Phu, along with his brother Chanh, served as a one-stop-shop for marijuana traffickers from other states seeking to set up marijuana grows, many of which operated on the black market.

In addition to carrying out the alleged ghost-licensing scheme, Phu is charged with using his brokerage firm and network of property-management and property-investment companies to service the housing and/or real estate needs of black-market marijuana traffickers by brokering land sales for them across Oklahoma, renting them land on which to operate their blackmarket marijuana grows, and renting them residences which served as marijuana stash houses and personal residences of the owners of black-market grows.

The Indictment also alleges that Phu and Chanh themselves were directly involved in the operation of black-market grows, and that Stacy rented land to individuals he knew were not licensed to grow, and allowed the black-market operation to operate on his land.

If found guilty, Stacy, Phu, and Chanh all face up to life in federal prison.

This prosecution is part of an Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces (OCDETF) investigation. OCDETF uses a prosecutorled, intelligence-driven, multiagency approach that leverages the strengths of federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies against criminal networks.

The charges are the result of more than two years of statewide investigations led by the Drug Enforcement Administration – Oklahoma City District Office, the FBI Oklahoma City Field Office, the Internal Revenue Service – Criminal Investigations, with the assistance of Homeland Security Investigations, and OBN.

Assistant U.S. Attorneys Nick Coffey and Elizabeth M. Bagwell are prosecuting the case. Stacy is a resident of Blanchard, and is affiliated with the management of properties in the Newcastle-area. According to the Stacy Legal Group website, Stacy is a Lieutenant Colonel in the Oklahoma Army National Guard who served multiple tours in Afghanistan, Iraq and Ukraine.

The website states that he is a board member of the Oklahoma Cannabis Industry Association and that one of his areas of practice is cannabis business structure and licensing.


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