USC becomes first NCAA athletic program to partner with a cannabis brand



The University of Southern California is the first college athletic program in the country to partner with a cannabis company after striking a deal with Cookies.

The USC Trojans announced a partnership with the brand owned by Gilbert Milam Jr., a Billboard-charting rapper and entrepreneur who goes by the name Berner.

'Cannabis is not a performance-enhancing drug.'

Cookies will partner with the USC football team as well as the men's and women's basketball teams, CBS Sports reported.

As Business Wire noted, fans will see Cookies' integration on the sports teams' digital channels while Cookies will also provide exclusive promotional items and tailgate experiences.

The announcement comes just a few months after the NCAA decided to remove cannabis from its banned substances list.

"Cannabis is not a performance-enhancing drug and that a harm-reduction approach to cannabis is best implemented at the school level," the NCAA committee said.

The Cookies CEO said he is thrilled to partner with such an iconic athletic department at USC.

"California is our home state and for Cookies to be involved with a premier athletic program, in the oldest private college in the state of California, is incredibly exciting for us," Berner said in a statement. "We are honored and excited to be a sponsor and Trojans supporter alongside other globally recognized brands. Fight on!"

The San Francisco-based company has received several healthy valuations in the last few years, ranging from from $150 million to upward of $1 billion.

Vice president and general manager of USC Sports Properties Drew DeHart called Cookies an "innovative brand" and a "global leader in CBD."

He added that the company was "deep in life-style culture and wellness."

Berner has had an interesting career path, partnering with rappers like Wiz Khalifa for long-term music ventures while facing lawsuits that have alleged bad business practices.

The rapper has also accused website Benzinga of publishing an AI-generated interview with him. After Milam Jr. himself declared the interview to be "not real," a reporter asked him if any of the article's quotes could be attributed to him.

"Absolutely not ! Not one word is mine," the rapper replied on X. "That's why I've always done my own quotes or interviews in my own voice. That ain't me at all," he added.

The entrepreneur has prided himself with being transparent and has often tried to expose fans to shadow-banning and social media bias, stating that allegedly that his content has been hidden and deleted on Meta platforms due to the nature of his business.

In an Instagram post, Berner called it "epic" to see his brand alongside companies such as Coca-Cola, Monster, and United Airlines as USC partners.

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Ilhan Omar's husband accused of defrauding investor in connection with short-lived wine company



The husband of Rep. Ilhan Omar, a far-left Democrat who represents Minneapolis and some of its suburbs, has been accused of failing to honor the terms of an investment contract he and a business associate made with a restaurant owner, according to a shocking report from the Minnesota Reformer earlier this month.

Mynett claimed that he left political consulting after 'MAGA extremists' continually harassed him for his marriage to Omar.

In March 2020, Omar married her third husband, Tim Mynett, a political consultant well-connected within Minnesota Democrat circles.

At the time, Omar paid nearly $3 million to E Street Group, a political consulting firm owned by Mynett and Will Hailer, for her 2020 campaign. Because of the apparent impropriety of the arrangement, Omar announced later that year that she would no longer use E Street Group.

'A snapshot of new trends': Mynett joins forces with restauranteur

About a year later, Mynett and Hailer convinced Naeem Mohd, who owns a restaurant in the D.C.-area, to invest $300,000 in their nascent wine company called eStCru. In exchange, Mynett and Hailer promised Mohd that he would receive his original investment plus a 200% return — a total of $900,000 — in just 18 short months. Should Mynett and Hailer default, they would tack 10% interest each month on any outstanding balance.

The terms of the contract may seem outrageous, but Mynett and Hailer were apparently in dire straits. A former client had paid them in grapes, and they were desperate to turn those grapes into wine, the Reformer reported. To that end, they hired Erica Stancliff, described by the Reformer as "a well-respected Sonoma winemaker," to head eStCru.

At first, eStCru seemed to be doing well. It began offering a line of wines with names like Blockchain, Overt, and The Devil’s Lie, and was even featured among Wine Business Monthly's list of "Hot Brands" of 2022. However, W. Blake Gray, editor of online wine outlet Wine-Searcher, noted that such accolades are not necessarily indicative of "business success."

"It's more a snapshot of new trends in the wine industry," Gray wrote.

That seems to have been the case with eStCru, which quickly turned sour after that short burst of success. Revenue at the company was so limited by early 2023 that Stancliff even reportedly worked for months without pay before ultimately resigning.

"It happened very abruptly," Stancliff said, according to the Reformer. "I couldn’t even tell you exactly how it happened other than we hit a wall and the reserve was no longer there."

The dramatic changes in revenue at eStCru are reflected in Omar's tax filings. She declared between $65,000 and $150,000 in spousal income from eStCru in 2021 and 2022 but no more than $1,000 from it in 2023.

As tight as money was, Mynett and Hailer did manage to pay back Mohd's original $300,000 investment, though they allegedly did so about a month late. They also reportedly never paid any of the promised interest.

Mohd later sued, claiming that Mynett and Hailer "fraudulently misrepresented ... that estCru, LLC was a legitimate company." He is seeking $780,000.

Mynett and Hailer are still trying to sell the "intellectual property and trademarks" associated with eStCru, the Reporter said.

In an email, Hailer told the Reformer that "ESTCRU LLC like many wineries is living invoice to invoice, sale to sale to stay afloat given the economic conditions of the industry." He also admitted that eStCru may owe Stancliff backpay.

Mynett claimed that he left political consulting after "MAGA extremists" continually harassed him for his marriage to Omar. He also insisted that he and Hailer have since become "incredibly successful" at digital advertising and targeting, the Reformer said.

Attorneys Mark Thomson and Andy Phillips, who represent Mynett and Hailer, added: "Any suggestion that Will or Tim deliberately defrauded investors or otherwise consciously conspired to rip people off would be false and defamatory."

'Deception': Controversy carries over to Omar's 2024 campaign

Omar has not responded to the Reformer's request for comment. There are no reports that she was personally involved in the financial agreement between Mynett, Hailer, and Mohd.

Still, her opponent in the 2024 election has made her husband's seemingly shady business deals a campaign issue. At a press conference on June 6, Don Samuels, a Democrat former Minneapolis city councilman, accused Omar of engaging in "deception."

"Representative Omar has used her time for three terms in Congress — what many would consider the opportunity and honor of a lifetime — to divide our community and enrich herself in the process," Samuels said.

"Based on the Reformer story, it looks like there’s very little money in the recorded entities that are on disclosures, and potentially millions of dollars in the underlying entities that are not exposed," one of Samuels' campaign associates added.

Omar, Mynett, and several 'marijuana entrepreneurs'

The Reformer also noted that other companies founded by Hailer and Mynett are currently embroiled in a separate alleged fraud controversy in connection with several "marijuana entrepreneurs" in South Dakota. In April 2023, these companies — eSt Ventures, Badlands Fund GP, and Badlands Ventures — agreed to pay the investors $1.7 million to settle a lawsuit for alleged breach of contract.

However, only $500,000 has been paid. Last fall, Hailer signed a confession of judgment, admitting that the companies still owed the entrepreneurs $1.2 million.

Mynett was named in the lawsuit but not as a defendant. He separated from eSt Ventures in early 2022, telling the Reformer that he was not "active in any of the work (securing investment, placing investment or even structure)." The company is now listed as "inactive" since it owes fees to the state of Nebraska.

Omar did not list eSt Ventures on any tax filings but did list a company called "EstVenture LLC." She claimed between $5,001 and $15,000 in spousal income associated with EstVenture LLC in 2021 and between $15,001 and $50,000 in 2022. She did not list the LLC in her 2023 filing.

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Democratic Governor Pardons Over 175,000 Marijuana Convictions

'You have to start removing these barriers'

Cannabis tax attorney running against GOP's Stefanik floats 're-education camp' for 'MAGA' Trump supporters after election



A cannabis tax attorney running against Republican U.S. Rep. Elise Stefanik in New York’s 21st Congressional District floated the notion of a "re-education camp" for "MAGA" supporters of former President Donald Trump following November's election, Fox News reported.

Democrat Paula Collins made the comments during a public Zoom town hall this week, the cable news network said. You can listen to audio of her comments here.

'This is yet another reason why President Trump, Elise Stefanik, and voters in Upstate [New York] and across America will clean the Democrats’ clocks at the ballot box this November.'

"Even if we were to have a resounding blue wave come through, as many of us would like, putting it all back together again after we’ve gone through this MAGA nightmare and re-educating, basically — which, that sounds like a rather, um [laughs] a re-education camp," Collins said during the town hall. "I don’t think we really want call it that. I’m sure we can find another way to phrase it."

Collins explained her comments in an email to Fox News Digital: "We currently have lawmakers, including Rep. Elise Stefanik, who mis-quote or mis-understand the law. Even if MAGA were to be resoundingly defeated, we would need to engage in widespread civics education, which both red and blue voters acknowledge has been slipping in recent years."

Collins added that "the goal would be such that regular citizens could understand the process by which the state courts process matters, compared to the federal court circuit, and so forth," Fox New noted.

"Rep. Elise Stefanik does not show a good understanding of the court structure in her home state of New York," Collins also told the cable news network.

In addition, Fox News said Collins emphasized that Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's recent case against Trump is "a state matter, not a federal matter," adding that Stefanik's "outcry bespeaks a lack of basic civics education, as well as a basic lack of respect for the state supreme court system in her home State of New York."

"Similarly, many voters have misunderstandings and lack of regard for basic judicial systems that underscore the need for civics education," she also told the cable news network.

Stefanik's senior advisor Alex DeGrasse hit back hard against Collins' comments.

"This radical New York City Democrat Socialist who literally is renting a bed and breakfast room in NY-21 was caught on tape saying she wants to force Trump voters through ‘re-education camps,’" DeGrasse told Fox News, adding that "this is yet another reason why President Trump, Elise Stefanik, and voters in Upstate [New York] and across America will clean the Democrats’ clocks at the ballot box this November."

Collins has said that before this spring, she lived full time in New York City, the cable news network said, adding that election documents show Collins is based out of her law office — the Law Office of Paula Collins, PLLC — in New York City. Fox News added that she rents a room in a rental housing unit in Canton, New York, in order to claim residency in the 21st district.

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Texas Sues Cities Over Cannabis Decriminalization Laws

'I will not stand idly,' said Ken Paxton

Pritzker touts marijuana sales in Illinois



Illionois Gov. J.B. Pritzker, a Democrat, raised eyebrows by celebrating marijuana sales in the state.

"For the third year in a row, Illinois had record-setting growth for adult-use cannabis sales. We're building the most prosperous and accessible cannabis industry in the nation – taking steps to repair the damage of the past and creating real opportunity for all Illinoisans," Pritzker's post declared.

Dana Perino responded by tweeting, "You're bragging about this? geez Louise."

— (@)

"This is all that JB Pritzker has to offer- drugs and abortion. What a dark, depressing agenda for a state filled with such hopeful people," GOP Rep. Mary Miller of Illinois tweeted.

Pritzker, who took office in early 2019 and won re-election in 2022, has claimed that "abortion access is healthcare."

"The Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation ('IDFPR') announced today that adult use cannabis sales set a new annual record in 2023, exceeding $1.6 billion," according to a press release issued earlier this month. The state is raking in tax revenues due to the pot sales. "Sales taxes collected at Illinois adult use cannabis dispensaries totaled $417.6 million in 2023, per the Illinois Department of Revenue," the press release stated.

"Approximately 3 in 10 people who use marijuana have marijuana use disorder," the CDC notes. "Some signs and symptoms of marijuana use disorder include trying but failing to quit using marijuana or giving up important activities with friends and family in favor of using marijuana. The risk of developing marijuana use disorder is stronger in people who start using marijuana during youth or adolescence and who use marijuana more frequently."

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Atlantic City board approves pot shop opening up near Catholic convent where nuns assist struggling addicts



A group of Catholic nuns in New Jersey, who, among other things, work to assist those struggling with addiction, may soon have a pot shop open up next door to their convent.

The Franciscan Sisters of the Renewal is an order of Catholic sisters that began in the Bronx in 1988. In 2017, the order opened its first American convent outside New York City: the St. Michael Convent in Atlantic City, New Jersey. "The sisters live at St. Michael’s Convent and have a drop-in center for the homeless next door to St. Nicholas Tolentine Church," a website for the convent reads.

As many in the area struggle with alcoholism and other forms of substance abuse, the sisters regularly host sobriety meetings at the convent, as well as other classes for teens in need.

Despite the sisters' devotion to God and to serving the poor and downtrodden, a government board determined to make Atlantic City the cannabis capital of the East Coast may soon impede their noble work. The Casino Reinvestment Development Authority, which is tasked with planning and development in Atlantic City, has approved applications for two new cannabis dispensaries, including one just 150 feet from St. Michael's Convent.

At a hearing on November 2, three nuns from the convent voiced strong opposition to a new dispensary in the area. "I’m actually Dutch," said Sr. Joseph Van Munster, "so I grew up in a country where marijuana was legalized, and I’ve seen a lot of things over the years."

Sr. Joseph then explained that legalized marijuana requires a strong police presence, which Holland has. By comparison, police response times in Atlantic City can be slow, she said, and the city is already plagued by illicit drug use. She also expressed concerns that a pot shop would negatively affect kids in the area as well as those in addiction recovery.

Other neighborhood residents expressed similar concerns about the proposed shop's proximity to the church. The shop would take over an old dry cleaning business that has closed.

Lance Landgraf, the director of planning and development for the CRDA, chuckled about the nuns' unusual appearance at the hearing. "I’ve never had to swear in a nun before," he claimed.

Landgraf insisted that he shares some of their concerns about the growing number of dispensaries in Atlantic City and that he has discussed them with members of the CRDA. However, he also noted that though there is a prohibition against opening dispensaries near schools, there is no legal prohibition against opening them near churches.

Members of the Chelsea Baptist Church learned that firsthand over the summer when they objected to a dispensary opening about a block from their church. The CRDA voted to approve that dispensary anyway. "They don’t want them anywhere near the casinos, but they don’t care where else they go," Pastor Tom Weer said in September.

As it has in most cases, the board voted to approve the application for the dispensary near the convent, following the lead of Mayor Marty Small Sr. and his administrative team, who seem to believe cannabis will be an economic boon for Atlantic City. "My focus is to make Atlantic City great, to make Atlantic City the East Coast hub for cannabis," said Kashawn McKinley, the city’s cannabis czar.

Neither the sisters nor the CRDA responded to the New York Post's request for comment.

Franciscan Sisters of the Renewal: Our Life youtu.be

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'Not one word is mine': Rapper says AI-generated interview was used to 'slander' him after outlet retracts 'fabricated' story



A rapper and entrepreneur said that a competitor procured an interview with him that was generated by artificial intelligence and committed "slander" and "defamation" against him.

Gilbert Milam Jr., aka Berner, is a rapper and a cannabis entrepreneur whose company Cookies was valued at $500 million by Forbes in 2020. The has brand opened multiple dispensaries and clothing outlets across the United States.

The artist faced lawsuits in 2023 that accused him of a litany of bad business practices, the Los Angeles Times reported. These lawsuits were the basis of the alleged AI-generated interview with the rapper.

Business website Benzinga published an article on November 12, 2023, that detailed a supposed print interview between Berner and author David Daxsen.

According to an archived version of the story, questions to Berner were posed as being direct from the author to the rapper.

The most damaging alleged questions included "concerns about a potential link between cannabis and children."

After that, the author alleged that he asked the rapper about "allegations regarding [his] involvement in human trafficking and sexual exploitation, as well as derogatory comments in YouTube interviews."

After Milam Jr. himself declared the interview to be "not real," reporter Grant Smith Ellis asked if any of the article's quotes could be attributed to him.

"Absolutely not ! Not one word is mine," the rapper replied on X. "That’s why I’ve always done my own quotes or interviews in my own voice. That ain’t me at all," he added.

Smith Ellis then reportedly ran the article through an AI-detector, which seemingly flagged both the questions and answers as being potentially written by AI.

On November 16, 2023, Benzinga's head of content, Javier Hasse, noted on X that the website had retracted a story by "an external unpaid contributor" because "the contributed content could not be verified & does not meet Benzinga’s editorial standards."

Four days later, Benzinga issued a full retraction on its website, stating that no interview took place.

"The information included was fabricated by external sources and Benzinga confirmed no such interview took place. Benzinga has removed this story, revoked access for the contributor who authored the piece and is reevaluating its guidelines for contributed content in light of this incident."

Berner took to his Instagram page to address the retraction, calling the article an "AI generated interview/ fake piece."

"Will you guys pursue this [writer] and who ever approved this to be released to find out who paid for this slander/ defamation on my name & [company]?" he asked while tagging the business outlet.

"It’s unfortunate how unreliable media has become in 2023 , but even more disappointing how far competition will go to get you out the way," Berner added.

Reporter Smith Ellis pointed to an alleged article about Daxsen and claimed that he is "more than a 'correspondent' for Benzinga," but also "owns a bank (Daxsen Bank) that invests in the #cannabis industry."

That article, also on Benzinga, appeared to have been removed by the outlet along with other articles about Berner.

Second update;

It seems that @SirDaxsen (David Daxsen) is more than a "correspondent" for @Benzinga, he also owns a bank (Daxsen Bank) that invests in the #cannabis industry.

Further, another reporter for Benzinga, @JoanaScopel, may also have used AI to create content. pic.twitter.com/z7M4a5igmK
— Grant Smith Ellis (@GrantSmithEllis) November 13, 2023

However, different articles promoting Daxsen, whose real name is David Xavier Sánchez, remain on Benzinga's site.

Daxsen did not immediately reply to requests for comment. This article will be updated with any relevant responses.

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Weed Advocates Are Ramping Up Lobbying Efforts And Notching Wins

'Marijuana use isn’t without its health concerns'