Maine
Maine investigating moldy cannabis that led to state’s first recall
One week after the state recalled a handful of cannabis products for failing mold and yeast tests, it remains unclear how the contaminated products made it to the market.
The recall, announced last week, impacts one strain of cannabis flower and three strains of pre-rolls, all of which were produced by Cannabis Cured, a cultivator and retailer headquartered in Fairfield. It was the state’s first cannabis recall since the market launched four years ago.
Maine’s recreational cannabis is required to be tested, and Cannabis Cured maintains that the samples passed an initial round of testing.
“Before anything is placed on a shelf at Cannabis Cured, every item must have successfully met all of Maine’s rigorous quality and safety standards,” the company said in a statement on its website. “During a subsequent audit test conducted by the state, a portion of the products that they tested continued to meet state standards, while a portion did not.”
The company said all tainted products were immediately removed from shelves.
“Cannabis Cured puts safety and product quality above all else,” it said, adding that customers who bought the contaminated product could seek a refund or replacement at any of the company’s recreational locations.
Cannabis Cured declined to answer any other questions about the recall until it has completed “a thorough due diligence process and review,” but it did not say when that might be.
STATE SAYS LAB NOT AT FAULT
John Hudak, director of the Office of Cannabis Policy, said there was a “knee-jerk reaction” after the announcement to place the blame on the testing facility.
But Hudak was clear that “the issues did not exist within the cannabis testing facilities” and none of the state’s four labs is under investigation.
He defended the labs in a notice sent to industry members Friday.
“This recall was not necessitated by any misconduct by any cannabis testing facility operating in the state, nor any concerns regarding the methods, technology, processes or procedures used by these testing facilities,” Hudak wrote, adding that he has no concerns about the integrity of any of the labs.
Hudak would not say which lab tested the cannabis samples, citing an ongoing investigation.
The recall applies to 1-gram pre-rolls and packs of five pre-rolls of the strain GG4 sold between Aug. 27 and Sept. 9; 1/8-ounce packages of flower and 1-gram pre-rolls of a strain called Jelly Donutz, which were sold from Aug. 28 to Sept. 9; and five pre-roll packs of the strain Portal, sold from Aug. 28 to Sept. 3, the Office of Cannabis Policy said in its statement.
Inhaling cannabis containing unsafe levels of mold can lead to sinus issues, allergies, headaches, dizziness or fatigue,” the office said in the statement. “Any consumer who has ingested these products and is experiencing symptoms or adverse reactions should contact their physician immediately.”
HOW TESTING WORKS
Not every cannabis product on a store’s shelf has been individually tested. Rather, cultivators and manufacturers are required to submit “representative” samples of each batch. Sample sizes vary based on product and batch size and must be taken from multiple parts of the product. For cannabis flower, pre-roll and trim, for example, sample sizes range from 6.5 grams for a 2.5 kilogram batch and up to 22 grams for a 10 kilogram batch.
A contaminated batch hitting the market doesn’t automatically mean nefarious activity, Hudak said.
“This typically happens when there’s improper sample selection collection from the batches that are produced,” Hudak said.
This can happen accidentally because of improper training or intentionally, by not selecting a truly representative sample.
Hudak would not speculate on what happened in the case with Cannabis Cured, but he praised the “robust” testing and tracking system that raised a red flag.
It’s not the first time an issue has been caught, he said, but it is the first time the product had already been stocked on shelves and sold to consumers.
Yeast and mold are the most common contaminants that cause a sample to fail a test, according to Chris Altomare, founder and CEO of Portland-based Nova Analytics, one of the four licensed testing labs in the state. Altomare declined to say whether Nova Analytics tested the recalled product, citing confidentiality.
Maine requires recreational cannabis be tested for filth and foreign materials, mold and mildew, harmful microbes, potency, homogeneity and cannabinoid profiles, moisture content, heavy metals, residual solvents, and pesticides. The state does not require medical cannabis to be tested.
Mold is the most difficult test to pass, Altomare said.
“It’s easy not to fail for pesticides – you just don’t use pesticides,” he said. “Mold is just a really prevalent thing. It’s hard to control.”
MAKING IMPROVEMENTS
The failure threshold for yeast or mold contamination is 10,000 colony-forming units per gram.
Employees at Nova Analytics are trying to identify which microbes are most commonly found in samples that fail the required tests and whether they’re all harmful.
The goal, Altomare said, is to help the state improve its yeast and mold regulations.
Hudak, though, said the state’s standard is solid. It’s used by many other states and is the threshold recommended by the American Herbal Pharmacopoeia, he said.
“I’m always interested in new research and new data,” he said, but “what I don’t want is for yeast and mold (regulations) to be driven by business decisions rather than the health and safety of consumers.”
Hudak said the office will review what happened both internally and externally to learn what it might need to do better or how the office can help prevent another recall.
However, he added, it’s important not to overreact.
“One recall is four years is a pretty good track record,” Hudak said. “I don’t think that upending the way that samples are collected is likely necessitated here.”
The contaminated product was sold at Cannabis Cured’s adult-use retail locations in Bangor, Carrabassett Valley, Damariscotta, Eliot, Fairfield, Stratton and Thomaston, the office said in its statement. The company’s Portland location was not listed.
Hudak said the tracking system only records “from seed to sale,” so it wasn’t clear how much product has been returned. Cannabis Cured and Sweet Relief are keeping track of that information and will share it with the state, he said, adding that any of the contaminated product on the shelf that wasn’t sold has been accounted for and “destroyed.”
Maine
See how much snow has fallen across Maine on Christmas Eve
Maine has been blanketed with a fresh coat of snow from York to the St. John Valley.
The storm that began Tuesday will wrap up later on Christmas Eve, adding to the already measurable snow that has fallen in places.
Some communities have seen well over a foot of new snow, particularly toward the coast and western hills, while the north has seen but a dusting.
Here are the latest snowfall totals available from the National Weather Service offices in Caribou and Gray on Wednesday morning. These totals are preliminary based on reports filed with the weather service. No reports were available Wednesday morning for Lincoln County.
Androscoggin
— Lisbon, 16.8 inches
— Auburn, 16.5 inches
— Lewiston, 15 inches
— Durham, 15 inches
— Lisbon Falls, 14 inches
— Greene, 13.7 inches
— Canton, 12.5 inches
— Poland, 12.2 inches
— Livermore Falls, 10.5 inches
Aroostook
— Houlton, 1.5 inches
— Castle Hill, 1 inches
— Presque Isle, 0.2 inches
— New Sweden, 0.1 inches
Cumberland
— Freeport, 17 inches
— Cumberland, 14.5 inches
— Gray, 12.8 inches
— North Powna, 12 inches
— Brunswick, 11.8 inches
— Cumberland Center, 11.7 inches
— New Gloucester, 11 inches
— Windham, 11 inches
— North Windham, 9.8 inches
— Falmouth, 9.4 inches
— Raymond, 7 inches
— Denmark, 6.8 inches
— Standish, 6.5 inches
— Sebago, 5 inches
— South Portland, 4.9 inches
— Portland, 4.9 inches
Franklin
— Madrid, 8.6 inches
— Rangeley, 6.5 inches
— New Sharon, 5.5 inches
Hancock
— Orland, 5.5 inches
— Dedham, 5 inches
— Seawall, 5 inches
— Southwest Harbor, 4.7 inches
— East Surry, 4.6 inches
— Trenton, 3 inches
Kennebec
— Gardiner, 11 inches
— Winthrop, 9.7 inches
— Manchester, 9.5 inches
— Farmingdale, 8.5 inches
— Augusta, 8.1 inches
— Waterville, 3 inches
Knox
— Hope, 7.0 inches
— Union, 6.8 inches
— Tenants Harbor, 3.5 inches
Oxford
— Bethel, 10.5 inches
— Newry, 8.3 inches
— Porter, 6.5 inches
Penobscot
— Exeter, 7 inches
— Orono, 6 inches
— Brewer, 6 inches
— Hermon, 5.3 inches
— Levant, 5 inches
— Holden, 5 inches
— Carmel, 5 inches
— Hudson, 4.5 inches
— Bangor, 4.4 inches
— Newport, 3.5 inches
— Bradley, 3.5 inches
— Milford, 2.8 inches
— Passadumkeag, 2.5 inches
— Millinocket, 2 inches
— Medway, 2 inches
— Greenbush, 2 inches
— Kenduskeag, 0.5 inches
Piscataquis
— Monson, 7 inches
— East Sangerville, 7 inches
— Dover-Foxcroft, 6 inches
— Abbot, 5.8 inches
— Sebec, 4.8 inches
Sagadahoc
— Woolwich, 13 inches
— Bowdoin, 12 inches
Somerset
— New Portland, 5 inches
— Anson, 4 inches
— Palmyra, 3.8 inches
Waldo
— Winterport, 4.5 inches
— Belfast, 3.8 inches
— Searsport, 3.8 inches
— Liberty, 1 inches
Washington
— Jonesboro, 2.5 inches
— Baileyville, 1.9 inches
— Pembroke, 1 inches
— Eastport, 0.8 inches
— Whiting, 0.5 inches
— Perry, 0.5 inches
York
— Cornish, 6.7 inches
— East Baldwin, 6.7 inches
— Limerick, 5.6 inches
— Kennebunk, 5 inches
— Ogunquit, 4.7 inches
— Limington, 2.6 inches
Maine
A Maine cop warned of interpreter fraud 5 years ago. The state is just catching up.
The Bangor Daily News was the first to report this story. What you’re reading here would likely not be made public without the efforts of professional journalists asking questions, interviewing sources and obtaining documents.
In late 2020, a federal investigator identified a concerning pattern within MaineCare, the state’s Medicaid program: Providers were billing for suspiciously high levels of interpreter services in what appeared to be a pattern of waste, abuse or fraud.
Interpreter claims surged by 283% between 2011 and 2017, with costs rising from roughly $800,000 to over $4.1 million annually. The increase occurred even as the number of refugees and immigrants arriving in Maine declined. The investigator wrote a report for fellow police, taking a closer look at billing trends following the high-profile prosecution of two interpreters, two social workers and a counselor in 2019.
In the years since the report was written, prosecutors have not brought any additional criminal cases. Under state law, interpreters are not required to have licenses. Providers have also continued to bill MaineCare at similar annual amounts to those that raised the investigator’s suspicion.
The report, which was obtained by the Bangor Daily News along with a partial copy of a second memo from 2021 that validated the findings through an additional analysis, has never been disclosed before. The findings are coming to light in the wake of a federal inquiry by a Republican-led congressional committee into welfare fraud.
That probe began after Minnesota federal prosecutors in November charged dozens of people, largely from that state’s Somali population, with stealing hundreds of millions of dollars from social programs. The House panel’s inquiry recently expanded to include a Maine behavioral provider that serves immigrants and refugees, Gateway Community Services.
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On Tuesday, the Maine Department of Health and Human Services halted MaineCare payments to Gateway, alleging the company overbilled for interpreter services by more than $1 million. Gateway denies the state’s claim. Since May, the organization has faced allegations of overbilling from a former employee, first published by The Maine Wire, the media arm of the conservative Maine Policy Institute.
The 2020 report shows that concerns of systemic fraud in the MaineCare system among providers who serve the state’s immigrant population were raised years ago. It is unclear how state officials responded to it. Gateway was the second-highest biller for interpreter services in the past 10 years, state data show.

A spokesperson for Attorney General Aaron Frey said the office was aware of Pellerin’s memo and referred the BDN to a 2019 case as its most recent example of prosecuting MaineCare fraud. The U.S. attorney’s office has not prosecuted any healthcare fraud cases pertaining to interpreters in Maine since 2019.
The author of the report, Brian Pellerin, who wrote it while serving as an agent focused on Maine with the inspector general’s office of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, declined an interview. He is now the No. 2 to Cumberland County Sheriff Kevin Joyce.
His report followed Maine’s last round of prosecutions around MaineCare fraud centered on the state’s Somali community. Federal prosecutors found that two interpreters had targeted newly arrived refugees — largely from Somalia — and brought them to specific providers for care. Those providers then charged MaineCare for interpreter services that were either overinflated or never happened, then gave the interpreters a cut of the money.
One of the interpreters, Abdirashid Ahmed, was estimated to have made off with at least $1.8 million, prosecutors said. He pleaded guilty in 2019. Nancy Ludwig, Heather Borst, and Danielle Defosse-Strout, all of whom worked for Lewiston-based Facing Change, were the providers also convicted in the scam.
Pellerin suspected that the same scheme might explain the high billing levels for interpreter services he discovered across the system. His investigation looked at the number of claims filed, patients served, and the total amount of MaineCare dollars distributed by MaineCare for interpreter services each year between 2011 and 2019.
Over those years, the number of claims filed steadily rose, from 16,300 in 2011 to 43,806 in 2019, according to Pellerin’s report. At the same time, the total number of patients ebbed and flowed with a low of 2,856 in 2011 to a peak of 4,559 in 2016. Meanwhile, the number of newly arrived refugees stayed flat, then declined — a notable fact given that the scheme Pellerin suspected depended on recruiting new arrivals, according to the report.
When certain MaineCare providers became reliant on immigrants, the interpreters started making demands, Pellerin found. They would ask providers to bill MaineCare for more units of interpreting services than they actually did and negotiate illegal kickbacks outside the MaineCare fee structure. If providers wanted to continue making money, they would have to listen to the interpreters or else they would lose their patients, the report found.
Pellerin’s report did not mention the names of the specific providers whose billing levels indicated potential fraud, waste or abuse. He noted that the scams not only defrauded Maine’s taxpayer-funded health system but also hurt vulnerable refugees, saying bad actors were taking advantage of fellow members of the state’s Somali community by treating them as a “harvested commodity” with little regard for their actual health needs.
“These MaineCare beneficiaries are often newly arriving immigrants who are potentially receiving lifesaving or life-altering medical treatment,” the report said.
Instead, they were potentially receiving poor quality services, or none at all, he concluded. Ludwig’s trial presented examples of that potential harm. A Somali refugee testified that Ahmed had brought him to see Ludwig, a social worker, to treat a toothache and asthma, according to federal court documents. Another testified he didn’t know why he was brought to Ludwig.
It is not clear what happened after Pellerin completed his report. But the spending trends observed in Pellerin’s report remain true, according to a BDN analysis of MaineCare data obtained in a public records request.
In the last 10 years, providers filed more than 45,000 interpreter claims, totaling more than $41.4 million. Half of that money went to only a few providers. The BDN contacted the top 10 providers and asked if they had ever been contacted by federal law enforcement. Only two responded, with one of them saying they had not. (The BDN is not naming that provider because it has not been charged with a crime.)
The other, Gateway, said through a lawyer that it also had not been contacted in the last 10 years by federal law enforcement. The audit that prompted state officials to pause MaineCare payments to the company on Tuesday began in early 2023 and looked at claims submitted between 2021 and 2022, according to a notice of violation.
Prior to the announcement that the organization’s MaineCare payments had been suspended, the provider’s lawyer, Pawel Bincyzk, denied allegations of fraud or being aware of Pellerin’s report.
“Gateway stands by its previous statements on this issue and will continue to cooperate with the state as it has in the past,” Bincyzk said.
Maine is one of 18 states in the country that provides direct reimbursement for language interpreters under Medicaid. The state pays $20 per 15 minutes for interpreting, according to the MaineCare manual. Interpreters don’t bill the state directly. Instead, a provider such as a doctor or mental health counselor bills MaineCare for services rendered, as well as interpreting. The provider then pays the interpreter, according to state regulations.
When Pellerin’s report was written and still today, MaineCare’s manual says interpreters must hold a state license. DHHS reminded providers in 2021 that they were supposed to provide the interpreter’s appropriate certification and licensure, along with other documentation to prove their qualifications.
However, the state’s licensing office doesn’t oversee interpreters except for those focused on American Sign Language. In 2019, the Maine Legislature approved a measure that eliminated the licenses that governed other interpreters, getting rid of the mechanism to license foreign language interpreters despite the requirement in state regulations.
Maine DHHS follows the procedures outlined in the MaineCare manual and can do reviews after a payment is made, department spokesperson Lindsay Hammes said. That review typically includes documentation related to qualifications, date, time, and duration of service, language used and costs.
But the agency did not specifically answer questions about how many times its internal auditing unit has found billing violations for interpreter services. It also did not clarify how interpreters are supposed to be licensed as required by MaineCare when no specific foreign language licensure exists in Maine, other than saying it was under the purview of the budget department.
To address the issues, Pellerin’s report included several things the state could take to correct the programmatic weaknesses identified. Those included incorporating similar requirements and qualifications used by courts for interpreters and requiring interpreters to become MaineCare providers so they could bill directly. At a minimum, it could enforce the regulations in the benefits manual, the report said.
Even among the 18 states that directly reimburse interpreters, every state has slightly different regulations around qualifications, said Mara Youdelman, the managing director of federal advocacy for the National Health Law Program. After spending nearly two decades studying the issue, she helped create the only group in the country that can certify foreign language interpreters for work in healthcare. The certification has been available since 2009.
Youdelman helps track how the 18 states across the country utilize interpreters and the regulatory framework those states use. While the state of Maine is spending millions of dollars each year on interpreting, she cautioned that it can be hard to tell if something nefarious is going on. In fact, Maine’s model of having providers bill MaineCare for interpreting is common among the 18 states, she said.
While she’s looked at interpreting services for many years, Youdelman said she’s never heard of interpreters defrauding the system. She worries that some will use instances of fraud as an excuse to cut language services.
“The competency of interpreters is critical,” she said. “We really do need to make sure that interpreters are actually qualified to do the job, because if not, and we have ineffective communication, then medical errors occur, negligence occurs, malpractice occurs, and people literally die.”
Bangor Daily News investigative reporter Sawyer Loftus may be reached at sloftus@bangordailynews.com.
Maine
York and Kittery resolve ‘border war’ dating back centuries
Maine’s two oldest towns, Kittery and York, have resolved a centuries-old dispute over their borders.
The issue dates back to the 1600s but reemerged a few years ago after a land developer purchased a parcel of land along Route 1 that straddles the boundary between the two towns.
York officials contended the border was a straight line, while Kittery argued that the divide meandered eastward from neighboring Eliot to Brave Boat Harbor on the coast.
The dispute between the two towns remained friendly — with residents of both towns making tongue-in-cheek references to a “border war” — until 2022, when York filed a lawsuit against Kittery in an effort to redraw the border. But the lawsuit was soon dismissed by a York County judge.
Now, over three and a half years later, the two towns have reached an agreement on a new boundary that the Maine Legislature is expected to officially approve in 2026.
The revised boundary was drawn up after a 2024 survey, the cost of which was split by both towns.
The proposed agreement follows roughly the same border both towns had been using, save for an added 4 acres of land designated for tree growth that will officially shift from York to Kittery.
York Town Manager Peter Thompson said officials are thrilled to have finally reached an agreement.
“ People that have been at this a lot longer than I have are very happy that this is kind of the last piece,” he said.
Kittery Town Council Chair Judy Spiller likewise said she is pleased to put the dispute to bed.
“It was our belief that we could sit down and sort this out,” she said. “Finally, the Select Board agreed with us that we should get the land surveyed, and then based on the results of the survey, we would ask the state Legislature to approve the new boundary line.”
The dispute initially arose in 2020 after a survey paid for by the developer indicated the true border was actually 333 feet south of the border both towns had been observing for much of their history.
York officials said a straight-line border had been established in 1652. Kittery disagreed and argued that the process to change the border would be an expensive and complicated one that could affect several families and businesses.
In 2020, Spiller defended the boundary line the towns had been following in a letter to the York Selectboard.
“In any event, the Town of Kittery will vigorously protect and defend her borders against any and all claims now, or in the future,” she wrote.
While any boundary change would not have altered property ownership, some officials feared it could prompt major changes to affected residents’ taxes and where they would send their children to school.
But the final agreement will have limited impact, officials from both towns said.
The 4 acres that are changing hands are wooded wetlands that won’t be developed.
And Thompson said the taxes for the affected property owners will only increase by a dollar or two.
Considering Kittery and York’s friendly histories with each other, Thompson said he’s glad the neighbors have finally put an end to the dispute.
“ The people of Kittery were great to work with,” he said. “Once we got over the initial rough patch there, it’s been fantastic.”
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