Shannon OâBrien, the former gubernatorial candidate and state treasurer who was suspended as chair of the Cannabis Control Commission last month, is suing Treasurer Deborah Goldberg over the matter.
Deborah Goldberg.
Goldberg, whose office is in charge of appointing the stateâs marijuana regulator, announced that OâBrien would step into the role just last summer. Goldberg abruptly suspended OâBrien on Sept. 14, with her office refusing to comment on a âpersonnel matter.â
Now, OâBrien is accusing Goldberg of suspending her without due process and asking a judge to reinstate her. OâBrien filed the lawsuit in Suffolk Superior Court last Thursday.
âTreasurer Goldberg removed Chair OâBrien without notice, without articulated reason, and without any opportunity to be heard, all of which is required by the clear and unambiguous provisions of Massachusetts law,â OâBrien said in her complaint.
After more than a week of silence about the reason for OâBrienâs suspension, Goldberg eventually told The Boston Globe that she received âseveral serious allegationsâ about OâBrienâs behavior. These allegations reportedly came to Goldberg from CCC staff and one other commissioner.
Independent investigators were enlisted to look into the complaints and returned with a report about their findings. The details of the allegations and the investigatorsâ findings have not been made public, according to the Globe.
âAccording to the CCCâs employee handbook, suspension with pay is the only allowable remedy at this point, as the findings are being reviewed and action is considered,â Goldberg said in a statement to the paper.
In her complaint, OâBrien said she was chosen by Goldberg to lead the CCC because of her belief in OâBrien as a âchange agentâ who would combat the agencyâs âentrenched bureaucracy and infighting.â
But Goldberg has âwillfully side-stepped both Massachusetts law and any process at allâ by suspending OâBrien, she said in the complaint. State law does not give Goldberg the authority to suspend a commissioner, she said.
Goldberg does have the power to remove a commissioner she appointed if the commissioner âis guilty of malfeasance in office; substantially neglects the duties of a commissioner; is unable to discharge the powers and duties of the office; commits gross misconduct; or is convicted of a felony,â according to state law.
Steve Hoffman, who served in the role before OâBrien, surprised the public when he resigned in spring 2022. There is a âplaybookâ at the CCC where âbaseless allegationsâ are asserted with the intention of causing lengthy investigations âthat were designed to force resignations,â OâBrien said in the complaint. She said that there were unsubstantiated allegations made against Hoffman and that a CCC employee told her that she would be âHoffman 2.0.â
âChair OâBrien, like her predecessor, has been subjected to the making of false and defamatory allegations against her, all made in an effort to force her removal,â OâBrien said in the complaint.