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Curio Wellness Acquires 4 Greenlight Dispensaries in Missouri

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[PRESS RELEASE] – TOWSON, Md., Oct. 22, 2025 – Curio Wellness, a leading U.S. cannabis brand and vertically integrated operator, has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire four high-volume retail dispensaries in Missouri operating under the Greenlight brand. The locations expand Curio’s best-in-class retail portfolio and presence in Southeast Missouri, increasing access to Curio products and experiences across the region. The transaction is expected to close following regulatory approval.

“Curio and Greenlight share a deep commitment to customer delight,” Curio Wellness CEO Michael Bronfein said. “These locations are exceptionally well operated and culturally aligned with our standards of operational excellence. Bringing them into the Curio family advances our mission to deliver trusted products, service and value – customer by customer, store by store, market by market.”

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The acquisition aligns with Curio’s disciplined approach to capital allocation and national expansion. By integrating four high-performing dispensaries into its Missouri platform, Curio adds immediate scale, strengthens retail capabilities, and creates a broader stage for its innovative products. The transaction is expected to be accretive and deliver shareholder value through operational synergies, supply-chain efficiencies and increased brand adoption in a large and growing market.

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“This acquisition represents an intentional step in our national strategy, building on market entries, franchise development, and brand partnerships designed for predictable results and sustainable growth,” Bronfein said.

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“Working with Curio Wellness is a decision we make with confidence,” Greenlight CEO John Mueller said. “Curio’s commitment to people, product quality and community aligns with our values. We’re proud these locations will continue to thrive.”

Curio expects continued momentum in Q4 2025, including the launch of its branded products in New York through a licensing partnership with Vireo Health and the opening of a franchise location in New Jersey, enabled by Curio’s Private Equity Fund for Social Equity operators.

“As we integrate these Missouri locations and execute on our Q4 initiatives in New York and New Jersey, our focus remains clear,” Bronfein said. “We’re here to bring innovation, access and value to customers and stakeholders nationwide – responsibly, consistently and at scale.”

SSC Advisors acted as financial advisers on this transaction.



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Ohio House Passes Cannabis, Hemp Bill Resulting From ‘Venn Diagram From Hell’

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Ohio House lawmakers passed the 18th version of a bill on Oct. 22 that aims to alter the state’s adult-use cannabis laws that voters approved in 2023, while also creating a tightly defined regulatory framework for hemp products.

The 228-page legislation, Substitute Senate Bill 56, preserves many aspects of the voter-approved initiative, such as home grows (six per adult or 12 per household), sharing between adults 21 and older, and allocating 36% of cannabis excise tax revenues to local municipalities that host dispensaries.

However, the bill would prohibit public consumption at places like music concerts and bar patios, and those caught with cannabis purchased outside the state would be criminalized. No other state where cannabis is legal imposes such restrictions on out-of-state purchases, according to cannabis advocacy group NORML.

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In addition, while adults could continue to home cultivate cannabis under the legislation, they’d be restricted to harvesting more than 2.5 ounces of flower, or roughly one plant, with a felony penalty for those who grow more than the number of plants allowed. Also, the bill intends to place a 35% THC cap on flower and a 70% THC cap on extracts for both medical and adult-use cannabis.

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“This isn’t what Ohioans voted for, and the fact that this bill is being rushed through the Legislature, with almost no opportunity for public comment, indicates that lawmakers know they are undermining the will of the voters,” NORML Political Director Morgan Fox said in a public statement. “Regardless of where one stands on cannabis issues, everyone should be outraged at this.”

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The substitute bill found bipartisan House support in an 87-8 vote on Oct. 22.

Rep. Brian Stewart, R-Ashville, who carried Sub. S.B. 56 in the House, said Wednesday on the chamber floor that the bill “preserves all of the core aspects” of what voters passed two years ago, including access to tested and regulated products from licensed dispensaries.

Stewart also argued that the Legislature has to act to preserve the 36% tax revenue fund for host communities after the Ohio Department of Taxation flagged language in the voter-approved initiative, suggesting that the language failed to properly appropriate the money.

It was always going to require legislation in this chamber,” he said.

The substitute bill also intends to establish a legal pathway for licensed “hemp dispensaries” to sell regulated and tested intoxicating hemp products, defined as containing more than 0.5 milligrams of delta-9 THC per serving or 2 milligrams per package, or more than 0.5 milligrams of total non-delta-9 THC per package. These sales would be limited to those 21 and older. Those who sell intoxicating hemp products to those under 21 would be guilty of a misdemeanor on the first offense and a felony on a subsequent offense.

Meanwhile, cannabinoid hemp beverages would be defined and regulated differently with a $1.20-per-gallon excise tax (more on this later).

Stewart said provisions included in the 18th version of the substitute bill resulted from a “Venn diagram from hell” that attempted to balance individual liberties, consumer safety, the financial well-being of local communities, and the “need to protect the health and safety” of Ohio children.

“If you’re reading through it and you’re saying, ‘Rep. Stewart, I don’t like Section X, I don’t like Section Y,’ please know you’re in good company. I don’t either,” he said. “This is not the bill that I originally introduced. It’s not the bill that Representative [Tex] Fischer originally introduced. But it is a carefully crafted compromise that makes Ohio better.”

While the Senate passed its version of the legislation in February, cannabis advocacy groups like the Marijuana Policy Project applauded the House Judiciary Committee for sitting on the legislation for nearly eight months as a means to prevent recriminalization measures “pushed by the Senate.”

However, many House members said during this week’s floor debate that Gov. Mike DeWine’s executive order issued Oct. 8 – one that attempts to shut down hemp-derived cannabinoid product sales and initiate emergency rulemaking – spurred lawmakers to go back to the drawing board for a legislative fix.

DeWine showcased various intoxicating hemp products in packaging that mimicked popular candies, like Nerds, Sour Patch Kids and Gushers, during his Oct. 8 press conference.

After lawmakers were at an impasse, DeWine’s executive order represented a turning point on Sub. S.B. 56, Rep. Tex Fischer, R-Boardman, said before Wednesday’s floor vote.

I think we all had an agreement that that was not the intent of the hemp legislation at the federal level or here in Ohio, but we did need to do something to protect kids from these products,” he said. “Some of these products are truly illicit and truly dangerous, and everybody, no matter how fervent of an activist on the hemp side of this issue you were, agreed something needed to be done.”

Legislative disagreements had revolved around Ohio businesses that would be negatively impacted by language in previous versions of the bill, Fischer said.

Under the House-passed substitute bill, places where children “walk freely,” like gas stations and grocery stores, would be prohibited from selling intoxicating hemp products, while certain intoxicating hemp retailers, such as a qualifying vape shop, would be “grandfathered in” for licensure.

For a retailer to qualify for a grandfathered-in hemp dispensary license, that retailer must have sold intoxicating hemp products on or before Aug. 30, and the store’s receipts from hemp and intoxicating hemp product sales must have exceeded 80% of its total gross receipts for either the past 12 months or the 2024 calendar year.

What about those people that have poured their blood, sweat, tears, years of work, potentially millions of dollars into building a business living by the rules that we set out, whether they were adequate or not, they were not breaking the law,” Fischer said. “Those were the people that I was motivated to stand up for, and while this bill doesn’t do everything that I wanted or everything that others want, I believe we have arrived at a reasonable conclusion to allow those people to still stay in business, to grandfather them into this new regulatory regime.”

No one under the age of 21 would be allowed inside these hemp dispensaries, which would be prohibited from selling cigarettes, tobacco, and vape or electronic smoking products under the bill. No more than 400 hemp dispensaries would be allowed in the state, unless those grandfathered in exceed that number.

While the biennial license renewal fee for Ohio’s cannabis dispensaries is $70,000, the two-year renewal license fee for a grandfathered-in hemp dispensary would be $35,000 under Sub. S.B. 56.

Meanwhile, hemp beverages, which the substitute bill defines as “drinkable cannabinoid products,” would be regulated differently. In addition, these products would be classified as low-level DCPs (5 milligrams or less of total THC per serving) or high-level DCPs (5-10 milligrams of total THC per serving). Only one serving per container would be allowed.

Neither low-level nor high-level DCPs would constitute an “intoxicating hemp product,” with DCPs falling under a separate regulatory framework for manufacturers, distributors and retailers. Still, sales to those under 21 would be prohibited.

Ohio retailers with Class C liquor licenses, such as grocery stores that sell alcohol for carryout only, would be allowed to sell high-level DCPs. Meanwhile, Ohio retailers with licenses for on-site consumption, such as restaurants and bars, would be allowed to sell low-level DCPs.

While the substitute bill would allow DCP manufacturers to create higher-dose beverages that contain more than 10 milligrams of THC, they would be restricted to distributing and/or selling those products to out-of-state partners.

Fischer said there were a lot of wins “for us so-called ‘hemp-resentatives,’” in the substitute bill.  

Many of you heard from beverage manufacturers, bars, restaurants, retailers about how popular these products are, but there are also a lot of folks that weren’t yet comfortable stocking these products because of the regulatory uncertainty that is a result of our inability to previously come to an agreement here in Columbus,” he said. “I think this strikes the appropriate tone of a reasonable, fair and pro-business regulatory regime while still maintaining that these products and consumers should be safe.”

While it’s unclear if the Senate will agree to the House’s amended substitute bill or take the legislation to a conference committee for further debate – before possibly sending the bill to DeWine’s desk – the potential outcomes are significant for Ohio stakeholders: cannabis businesses, hemp businesses, consumers, patients and children.

Rep. Jamie Callender, R-Concord, a long-time advocate for cannabis reform in the Buckeye State, acknowledged the legislation “is not perfect” before voting to support the bill.

Callender said a “no” vote on the legislation represents allowing retailers to continue selling high-THC products to children walking home from schools with impunity.

“I imagine everybody in this room can find at least one thing they don’t like in the bill, one thing they think can be improved on,” he said. “You have my commitment. I’ll keep working with everyone to make it better, but I believe we have to act.”



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What To Know About Cannabis And A Brain Aneurysm

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Discover what to know about cannabis and a brain aneurysm—risks, recovery, and medical cautions.

When celebrity Kim Kardashian recently revealed she was diagnosed with a small brain aneurysm—reportedly detected during a routine MRI and attributed by her doctors to stress—her disclosure sparked interest in a condition most people don’t know much about. A brain aneurysm is a bulging or ballooning blood vessel in the brain, which can be life-threatening if it ruptures. With growing interest around cannabis use—both medically and recreationally—it’s worth exploring what to know about cannabis and a brain aneurysm.

RELATED: The Science Behind Cannabis And Happiness

A brain aneurysm (sometimes called an intracranial aneurysm) occurs when a weakened area of a blood vessel in the brain bulges outward. If the aneurysm ruptures, it can lead to a major bleed called a subarachnoid hemorrhage—a medical emergency. Many aneurysms remain small and never rupture, but risk factors include high blood pressure, smoking, genetic predisposition, and possibly vascular stress. Kim Kardashian’s case underlines how even individuals with public profiles and access to healthcare can face this silent risk.

What To Know About Cannabis And A Brain Aneurysm

Cannabis—or more precisely its components such as cannabidiol (CBD) and tetrahydrocannabinol (THC)—has been studied for a variety of health issues. For some conditions like chronic pain, certain forms of epilepsy, or spasticity in multiple sclerosis, cannabinoids may offer symptomatic relief. There is emerging evidence medical marijuana can improve quality of life for some patients: reducing pain, improving sleep or mood, and even decreasing reliance on opioids in certain contexts.

In the broad sense, in jurisdictions across the U.S., many patients use it under medical supervision for conditions like migraine, nausea from chemotherapy, or chronic neuropathic pain. “Medical” use does not equate to “safe in all contexts”—especially when other serious medical issues are present.

When it comes to brain aneurysms—particularly after diagnosis or treatment—the research raises caution flags about cannabis use:

  • Studies show people who have had an aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (a burst aneurysm), cannabis users had higher rates of delayed cerebral ischemia (DCI)—a serious complication which can lead to poor outcome. One large study found cannabis users had about a 2.7 times greater risk of DCI compared with non-users.
  • Other studies link recreational cannabis use to a higher likelihood of having an aneurysm rupture in the first place—one estimate suggested about an 18 % increased risk.
  • Research also suggests cannabis affects vascular tone, cerebral blood flow, mitochondrial function in brain cells, and may contribute to vasospasm (narrowing of blood vessels) or oxidative stress—mechanisms which are particularly concerning in someone with a vulnerable blood vessel wall.
  • One review warned even for unruptured aneurysms, if cannabis is used, individuals should be aware they may face worse outcomes should rupture occur.

RELATED: Evidence About Burning Mouth Syndrome And Cannabinoids

If you or someone you know has been diagnosed with a brain aneurysm (ruptured or unruptured), here are some practical steps:

  • Talk to your neurologist/neurosurgeon about cannabis use. The research suggests elevated risks in people with aneurysms who use cannabis.
  • Avoid assuming “medical use = safe.” Even if you’re using cannabis under a physician’s care, an aneurysm changes the risk profile.
  • Focus on established risk-reduction: control blood pressure, stop smoking, manage cholesterol, avoid stimulants. These traditional strategies remain foundational.
  • If you have an untreated aneurysm and are considering cannabis for medical reasons, proceed with caution.Ask your medical team about the specific size, location, treatment plan of your aneurysm and whether there are recommended restrictions.
  • After an aneurysm rupture or treatment, strongly consider abstaining or closely monitoring any cannabis use. The data indicate increased complication rates in this particular setting.

The public disclosure by Kim Kardashian highlights how common aneurysms may be, but it also reminds us the decision to use cannabis in a medical context should be made carefully. While cannabis offers genuine medical benefits for some conditions, when a brain aneurysm is in the picture—especially one which has ruptured or is being observed—caution is warranted. Speak with a neurologist familiar with cerebrovascular risk, weigh the benefits and the unique risks, and make an informed choice rather than assuming “legal = safe.”



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MariMed to Expand Brand Distribution to New York

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[PRESS RELEASE] – NORWOOD, Mass., Oct. 23, 2025 – MariMed Inc., a leading cannabis consumer packaged goods company and retailer, announced a licensing agreement with Farm 2 Hand LLC, a New York State cannabis license holder, that will introduce the company’s top-selling portfolio of products throughout New York State. Terms of the agreement were not disclosed.

Farm 2 Hand intends to manufacture and distribute a variety of MariMed’s edible products as permitted under New York regulations. Those are initially expected to include Betty’s Eddies fruit chews; Bubby’s Baked baked goods; and InHouse gummies. The products will be produced in a new kitchen that MariMed will design and equip for Farm 2 Hand at Farm 2 Hand’s Bronx production facility.

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“Expanding the availability of our brands to the Empire State and its $6 billion total addressable market marks a significant step forward in our plan to own top-selling cannabis brands across the U.S.,” MariMed CEO Jon Levine said. “The addition of New York to our distribution footprint will help drive wholesale revenue, and being in the nation’s top media and influencer market will also help increase national awareness for our brands.”

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The company expects its products will be available to New York’s 500-plus dispensaries in 2026, following the build-out of the kitchen and regulatory approval.



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