
Brady Cobb
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One Plant Florida maintained its garden and lab facilities at its Indiantown, Florida Farm, and operated 8 retail dispensaries throughout the State as well as the State’s first e-commerce and on fleet enabled next day home delivery service. Brady also sits on the board of Captor Capital, a publicly traded cannabis company that owns and operates 12 dispensaries throughout California and is deeply embedded in the federal cannabis policy reform process since 2015.
A medical marijuana pioneer who uses his legal background to address marijuana policy reform as both an attorney and lobbyist, Brady cultivated his passion for the industry to found One Plant Florida (formerly 3 Boys Farm, LLC) in October of 2018. In building One Plant Florida from the ground up, Brady and his team of authentic cannabis purists and experienced industry insiders took a much different, and harder, path than its competitors, instead of focusing on opening retail stores, they focused on building out and scaling up their cultivation and lab facilities to support being able to grow and sell premium flower and solventless concentrates on scale. They recognized that they were only as good as the cannabis flower they could grow, and truly lived and died by a line from their mission statement; namely that their cannabis is grown, not made.
Prior to founding One Plant Florida, Cobb has led market-setting strategic investments in excess of 200 million dollars in the cannabis space as the CEO of publicly traded Sol Global Investments Corp., including investments into Verano Holdings, 3 Boys Farms, and a full U.S. and European hemp/CBD portfolio. He is a regular guest on Fox Business, Cheddar, and Yahoo Finance. Prior to that role, he founded and served as Chief Legal Officer of Liberty Health Sciences in Florida.
Cobb’s interest in medical marijuana began with his father, CW “Bill” Cobb, who in the late 1970s and early 1980s, helped smuggle $300 million worth of marijuana into the U.S., and was sentenced to twenty (20) years behind bars. Years later, cannabis was something that provided mental and physical release toward the end of his battle with cancer. The younger Cobb has since taken a different path in promoting its benefits--choosing to engine the product in a legal market.
Cobb earned his law degree from Barry University in Orlando, and later became a director at the nationally recognized Fort Lauderdale law firm Tripp Scott. There, he learned from former Florida Senate President James Scott and others about working through regulatory issues regarding marijuana.