🚨 Questions Raised About Senate District 34 Candidate Brent Driskill Following OBN Registration Denial
According to reporting by Page Six Oklahoma, Republican Oklahoma Senate District 34 candidate Brent Driskill was denied a marijuana-related registration by the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics (OBN), raising questions about compliance, transparency, and accountability.
Inside the OBN Investigation
The matter centers on a marijuana cultivation site located at 20012 East 6th Street in Tulsa, associated with 6th Investments LLC.
According to OBN findings, agents investigating an application in September 2024 alleged unlawful cultivation activity, diversion concerns, and a refusal to allow inspection of the facility.
The report states that occupants denied agents access to the property. Following the attempted inspection, neighbors and surveillance footage reportedly documented a U-Haul arriving at the site and later departing with marijuana loaded inside.
When agents later returned with a search warrant, most of the marijuana had reportedly been removed. Investigators documented only small quantities remaining, including material allegedly still smoldering in a burn pile.
OBN ultimately tied the activity to alleged unlawful manufacturing and cultivation under Oklahoma controlled substance laws.
The Ownership Change
In 2025, the OMMA license and METRC inventory were reportedly transferred to MGJT LLC, with Brent Driskill listed as the sole owner on the application.
According to OBN, more than 1,000 marijuana plants appeared to have been carried over from the prior operation.
The Bureau ultimately denied the registration application, citing:
• Compliance failures with state law
• Weak diversion controls
• Alleged false or misleading information
• Prior conduct involving controlled substances
• Public health and safety concerns
OBN’s conclusion was direct: approval would be “against public interest.”
Questions for Voters
Driskill is seeking the Republican nomination for Oklahoma Senate District 34 in the June 16, 2026 primary.
As with any candidate seeking public office, voters are entitled to review the facts and ask questions about matters that may reflect on leadership, judgment, and accountability.
Among the questions some voters may have:
• Were state regulators prevented from conducting an inspection?
• What is the full explanation for the ownership transition and inventory transfer?
• How does Driskill respond to the allegations and findings cited in the denial?
• What should voters know before casting their ballots?
This is ultimately a matter for voters to evaluate based on the available facts, the candidate’s response, and any additional information that becomes public.
Credit to Page Six Oklahoma for obtaining and reporting on the denial letter and related records.
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