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Updated with comment from the MPD.

Bummed about the Kush Gods bust? Well, there’s an app for that.

Less than a week after D.C. police seized the local marijuana edibles business’ three cars and arrested owner-operator Nicholas Cunningham and an associate, Kush Gods launched a mobile app that allows customers to submit orders.

The app’s launch “was perfect timing, actually,” says Cunningham, otherwise known as Mr. Kush God. Part of the terms of his release include that he stay away from Chinatown and the U Street Corridor, where passersby had been walking up to the Kush Gods cars and making a “donation” in exchange for pot brownies or gummy bears since the summer. The fleet was decorated with large-scale images of marijuana buds, and a phone number and Instagram account were emblazoned on the side, along with the hashtag “#HealingTheNation.”

The app, only available on Android for now, allows users to order edibles for a $10 “donation,” a fitted hat for $30, or pre-rolls for $20. Customers have been placing orders since the app’s Christmas launch, but the business won’t begin deliveries until this week.

The app also promises “exclusive music.” Right now, the only song available is “Medical” by Kush Gods. Sample lyrics: “All medical/ Don’t let it go / It’s my vegetables / So exceptional.”

Cunningham says that he has a new vehicle that will be out today, and it’s no less brazen than the cars that the police seized. In fact, it features the exact same marijuana bud wrap.

While it is legal to possess and smoke small amounts of marijuana thanks to Initiative 71, it remains illegal to sell or purchase the drug. The Kush Gods business thought it found a loophole by making the business “donation-only.”

“People understand the reality of the situation. Brownies are ten dollars,” he told DCist in October.

“In actuality, a mandatory donation is a payment for goods,” says Alexander Pe, general counsel at the Medical Marijuana Advocates Group. “It’s plainly a financial transaction. It’s illegal. It’s unfortunate, but that’s how it is.”

After an investigation that began in October, the police “concluded that marijuana was being sold, because our investigation showed they were making a profit,” MPD public information officer Karimah Bilal said.

Police arrested the 30-year-old Cunningham and 18-year-old Evonne Lidoff on Tuesday in Chinatown. They recovered $1,532, brownies containing THC, “multi colored gummi bears containing THC,” and 28 plastic baggies containing “green weed substance,” as well as a Mercedes Benz SUV, a Mercedes Benz Coupe/Roadster, and a Lexus Coupe, according to the police report.

“A portion of the brownies [obtained by an undercover officer] field-tested positive for THC, the main ingredient in marijuana,” the charging documents said—implying that some of the supposed edibles did not.

“Honestly, a lot of stories and shit that I hear are not true,” Cunningham says. “Everything that we give out does contain [THC]. We have people who come every day to get it. That’s all to make me look bad and stop the business.”

MPD clarified today that, “We conduct a field test on a portion of the substance believed to contain the narcotic. The entire portion of the substance is tested at the laboratory,” a process that takes “a few weeks” to get results. So did any of the edibles not contain THC in the field test? That’s “not something we can provide today,” MPD responded over email.

Cunningham notes that edibles “have always been confusing” in terms of dosages, because a person’s size and tolerance play a large role in how the drug will affect them.

Shortly after his release on Wednesday, Cunningham told DCist that he felt confident that he would beat the misdemeanor distribution of marijuana charges. His next court date is January 28, 2016.

The business is developing a new plan to ensure its legality, Cunningham says. Starting this Sunday, Kush Gods will give out free edibles to cancer and epilepsy patients, and veterans. When people donate to the company, the money will go towards those endeavors rather than a quid pro quo for goods.

Kush Gods will also require ID from customers to “slow down this undercover stuff,” he says.

Cunningham now has a Change.org petition to “Allow the Kush Gods to bless Washington D.C.!!” It has about 160 supporters.

“We’re not stopping,” says Cunningham. “This is the nation’s capital. If we can change things here, we can change the whole nation.”