random pop up

Today, I shared the post below about finding peace in nature, and someone left a comment that made me pause. He basically said, “Don’t bring people down.” It was an interesting response that got me thinking—as Brittini would say to me, what do I owe the pleasure of this engagement?

If someone’s commenting, there’s always a reason. So, naturally, we all started digging—licenses, ownerships, LLCs—you name it. I needed to understand: Why would my public accountability work in Cannabis trigger this response? I’m someone who craves knowledge, and every time an investor, politician, or banker tells my team to drop it—or offers a subtle pushback or threat—it only drives us to dig deeper.

That’s when we stumbled across something that didn’t quite add up: Prairie Cannabis

Here’s what we found:
• Prairie Cannabis hasn’t even opened its doors yet. Its first dispensary is preparing to launch under a new name and LLC with the agent of Sheila Fitzsimmons, the wife of nuEra CEO Robert Fitzsimmons.
• Original Approvals: This location (4S120 N. Illinois Route 59) was originally filed for and permitted by nuMed Partners LLC (now nuEra Cannabis), as confirmed by publicly available documents.
• Ownership Shift: Despite nuMed securing the necessary approvals and filing the original permits, the dispensary is now set to open under Prairie Cannabis, with Sheila Fitzsimmons listed as the registered agent for these newly formed LLCs.
And this raises a few questions:
• How does a dispensary, originally tied to nuMed, transition ownership to an entirely new company and individual without a clear public process?
• Aren’t there standard procedures and approval timelines for changing ownership in the cannabis industry?
• Or are these processes handled differently when protecting certain connections?
Since I’m not a lawyer or regulator, I decided to do the responsible thing: I brought this to the attention of our legal teams, federal regulators, and added more reports to my SEC complaints. After all, ensuring transparency and compliance in these processes is their role, isn’t it? Especially when Illinois is approving this during active litigation.

So, while we still don’t know why he decided to comment on my peaceful post, his words inadvertently led us to uncover something worth asking more questions about. Thanks—this might’ve slipped through the cracks otherwise. But now we can’t help but wonder:
• What else might have slipped through the cracks?
• What other rules or SOPs were bent to protect individuals caught in questionable actions?
• How far does the corruption go to cover up illegal activities?
Does anyone know if they’re using MJFreeway, Dutchie, or Posabit? Just curious.

Maybe I should’ve just enjoyed that MoonHalo and stayed in the moment—but here we are. Anyone familiar with Prairie Cannabis? Thoughts on how this all came to be? Let’s talk.

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beauty in chaos