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Definitely! A lot of that "came back" in last week. We have been between 122-131 for a while, hopefully today we change that to 130-141.
Analysts called for leg up to 140 after last earnings and it never happened. Today it catches up and runs over 140 in AH.
Unfortunately because big funds will start selling after and buyback hold period will be in place we will be back down to 130 area a week from now.
Hopefully once buy back starts back and the big guys are out we will climb back to 140+
That's pretty much EXACTLY what happened last quarter. But no to quarters are alike
Agree
Yea I normally dont trade and just hold AAPL but when it went down to 122 I could resist. Trimmed those today on one week 10point trade:)
You r right though FB is kinda getting in same bracket as AAPL as far as nicely running straight up
120 will happen. Just pulled some profits. If it takes a dip I'll buy back. FB always has great earnings and seems to dip after. I hope not as I still have 2/3 stake
So they are going to ask them to move some plants only to later destroy them lol
"It was a very cooperative conversation and they understood where we were coming from," Allman said.
I think that is a direct quote
Tomorrow it runs, will blow out earnings touch 140s in AH then come back to 130 in next week. Hopefully with great earnings 130 becomes serious resistance
Sold some today. Still got plenty but unloaded 1/3 of my shares
I just bought a few to start position will add on dip. No way we can hold this
I joined the party early yesterday. Got some green but CONGRATS to those who had it all along
Me to I'm all in! Will trim a bit heading into earnings but loving it! I was lucky to have had sold some other crap HAL lol so was sitting on a good amount of cash as Apple came down. Added at 122 and 125. Been holding some since 2008:)
FB got in at 58 been holding 1/3 long trading rest. Added more when it finally broke 80. May sell some as volume slows and buy back at 88-89 (where wver it just broke out of) if it falls back
Agree- FB is already acting like it released earnings lol
Crazy movement. Was on a steady run then bam. Defining breakout!
This earning session will def be buy the rumor and sell the news! Even though I expect GREAT earnings this stock is FLYING
Nope. Looks like they are cooperating with each other. Sheriff had legit concern and it was dealt with. Sheriff even complimented them
Looks like they now have a functioning, healthy, communicative relationship with sherif from the article below
Pinoleville asked to move pot plants
By: Adam Randall udjar@ukiahdj.com @udjadam on Twitter
Wednesday, July 15, 2015 - 1:49 p.m.
Marijuana plants that could be seen from inside a fenced-off area from Highway 101 at the Pinoleville Pomo Nation were recently moved at the request of the Mendocino County Sheriff's Office, Sheriff Tom Allman said Wednesday.
Allman said approximately 40 plants were on the property Tuesday morning and because of his concerns for residential safety in the area, he made a request to the Pinoleville Tribal Council that the plants be moved. Allman cited the MCSO's request was made because of the proximity of the plants to the roadway, and drug seeking behavior that has led to past home invasions in the area.
As of 6 p.m. Tuesday, the plants were moved elsewhere, according to Allman.
"It was a very cooperative conversation and they understood where we were coming from," Allman said.
A message was left for Pinoleville Business Board President Mike Canales seeking comment.
The Pinoleville tribe has been in the process of establishing a cooperative medical marijuana growing facility on its Ukiah property with Denver-based United Cannabis, and FoxBarry Cos. LLC out of Kansas
Not sure. But think u r correct
Ouch. Thanks for heads up
Could we get a breakout this week?? Within reaching distance of ATH
AAPL closes above 124.06 will mean the candles confirmed a bullish pattern. Add a solid volume day today and that means A LOT more then resistance and support on a weekly chart!
Pretty sure reversal heading into earnings has commenced. Remember stock buy backs due not occur leading up to and right after earnings so I fully expect volatility but overall gains.
Basically it's time to make some $$ with some green apples
Maybe CNAB makes another run??chart looks oversold and news may be significant:
Pinoleville Tribe’s ‘collective’ collaboration in development of medical cannabis project
Editor's note: This is the first in a six-part series of articles covering the establishment of one of the first tribal cannabis farming projects in the United States. The Pinoleville Pomo Nation is providing Ukiah Daily Journal readers with a first-hand, exclusive look at the people, the processes and the philosophical underpinnings of this groundbreaking project.
By Carole Brodsky
for Ukiah Daily Journal
"I admit that I'd drank the Kool-Aid like everyone else. We used to call cannabis locoweed. Once we understood this was the farthest thing from the truth, the tribe began moving forward. I was one of those detractors, until I saw and understood the entire cannabis story," says Mike Canales, president of the Business Board of the Pinoleville Pomo Nation.
Canales is referring to the shift in attitude that he and Pinoleville tribal members have undergone during the past year, as they researched and enlisted the assistance of cannabis experts to develop their own medical cannabis growing and processing operation on their reservation.
From the beginning, we only wanted to be involved with medicinal cannabis. Initially we discussed creating edible medicinal products. Regardless of what we did, we knew we'd need help – to learn to grow and make the medicine, to acquire the right equipment, find the right people and create the structure to run this operation. At that point, we brought Barry into the conversation," Canales continues.
Barry Brautman is the CEO of the FoxBarry Companies – a limited liability corporation providing tribal entities with development and construction of farming projects, casinos, fuel distribution and other services.
"We had already been discussing the casino project with the tribe when this idea was presented. We recognized this could be a great tribal opportunity. But we were also very clear we weren't just going to grow and sell pot," Brautman explains.
The tribe and FoxBarry investigated medical cannabis companies. "We looked at the market. Who were the medical cannabis companies? Who was doing research? Who was patient-oriented? Who was leading the way?" Canales explains.
The United Cannabis Corporation was the company that was selected as the consulting entity for the project. United Cannabis is a Colorado-based, publicly traded medical cannabis company (CNAB) that produces no recreational cannabis products. The company's stated focus is to utilize cannabis for medical purposes, refine and improve upon medical-grade cannabis strains, employ best practice industry principles and emphasize patient care.
Brautman and tribal members visited the United Cannabis facilities along with other dispensaries. It took Brautman only 15 minutes observing patients filling the medical aisles inside Colorado dispensaries to reach his own conclusions. "These were cancer patients. Suffering people. People in severe pain. They weren't there to get high. They were in line to solve medical issues."
"When we met everyone at United Cannabis, there was no talk about marijuana, but there was a lot of talk about medical cannabis. We feel that's the distinction between our project and other tribal cannabis projects. The United Cannabis folks have put an astounding amount of research into this. There's no one else producing a line of medical products of this purity and quality. We're proud to work with them as our consultants," Canales continues.
Canales stresses that staff from United Cannabis are strategic project consultants and not partners or owners in any form. "They are high-tech advisors with a proven track record who are supervising the growing, harvesting, testing and processing of the plants and the construction of permanent greenhouses and processing facilities."
The project is following guidelines set forth in SB 420, utilizing a collective-cooperative structure, along with a detailed 47-page tribal ordinance drafted specifically for the project.
"I was nervous at first. But we made sure that everything was going to be done by the book, and that I or anyone else wouldn't end up in jail," smiles Canales.
The tribe's ordinance replicates what is known as the "Cole Memorandum" – the 2013 U.S. Department of Justice memorandum which was issued to United States Attorneys to guide prosecutors enforcing civil and criminal cannabis investigations and prosecutions under the federal Controlled Substances Act.
The memorandum focuses upon eight priorities: no distribution of marijuana to minors; preventing criminal enterprises, gangs, and cartels from accessing cannabis revenues; preventing the diversion of cannabis from legal to illegal states; preventing state-authorized cannabis activity as a cover for other illegal drug trafficking or activities; preventing violence and firearm use when cultivating and distributing cannabis; preventing drugged driving or the exacerbation of other adverse cannabis-related public health consequences; preventing the cultivation, production, environmental hazards and public safety concerns on public lands, and preventing cannabis possession or use on federal property.
Additionally, the ordinance includes a 2014 memorandum from the United States Department of Justice titled Policy Statement Regarding Marijuana Issues in Indian Country, which states that the eight priorities in "Cole" memorandum will also guide cannabis enforcement efforts of US Attorneys in Indian Country.
This memorandum states each United States Attorney should consult with the affected tribes on a government-to-government basis when evaluating marijuana enforcement activities in Indian Country.
"Our tribal ordinance states that we will arrest any tribal member that takes even one seed from our garden," says Canales. "Again, this is not about recreational marijuana. We are instituting guidelines that are stricter than the requirements of SB 420."
The tribal ordinance states that all applicable taxes under tribal, state and federal law shall be collected and paid. A regulatory agency will oversee all aspects of the operation – from the type and quantity of all effluent to be discharged into the tribe's wastewater or storm-water system, the prohibition of adulterating medical cannabis with any chemical or other compound to alter color, appearance, weight or smell, the prohibition of on-site cannabis consumption and the ruling that all products will be produced with child-resistant packaging, designed not to mimic candy, cookies or other items attractive to children.
As the midsummer sun blazes on the Pinoleville Medical Cannabis Project's garden site, a young man holds a staff – pacing in a deliberate circle, playing a whistle-like pipe, offering up prayers and gratitude, honoring ancestors and invoking Spirit to bless the project. "We had a blessing today," says Canales.
Canales envisions many blessings for the tribe and the greater community. "We will be making lives better – through the medicines, employment opportunities, youth programs, infrastructure improvements, donations to local charities and better education and housing for our people."
"Our collective is 100 percent tribally owned – a non-profit, formed and owned under the authority of the Pinoleville Pomo Nation. We may be the first tribal collective in the nation. We'll certainly be the first tribe to produce organic cannabis medicine. That's what Mendo should be. The first."
Pinoleville Tribe’s ‘collective’ collaboration in development of medical cannabis project
Editor's note: This is the first in a six-part series of articles covering the establishment of one of the first tribal cannabis farming projects in the United States. The Pinoleville Pomo Nation is providing Ukiah Daily Journal readers with a first-hand, exclusive look at the people, the processes and the philosophical underpinnings of this groundbreaking project.
By Carole Brodsky
for Ukiah Daily Journal
"I admit that I'd drank the Kool-Aid like everyone else. We used to call cannabis locoweed. Once we understood this was the farthest thing from the truth, the tribe began moving forward. I was one of those detractors, until I saw and understood the entire cannabis story," says Mike Canales, president of the Business Board of the Pinoleville Pomo Nation.
Canales is referring to the shift in attitude that he and Pinoleville tribal members have undergone during the past year, as they researched and enlisted the assistance of cannabis experts to develop their own medical cannabis growing and processing operation on their reservation.
From the beginning, we only wanted to be involved with medicinal cannabis. Initially we discussed creating edible medicinal products. Regardless of what we did, we knew we'd need help – to learn to grow and make the medicine, to acquire the right equipment, find the right people and create the structure to run this operation. At that point, we brought Barry into the conversation," Canales continues.
Barry Brautman is the CEO of the FoxBarry Companies – a limited liability corporation providing tribal entities with development and construction of farming projects, casinos, fuel distribution and other services.
"We had already been discussing the casino project with the tribe when this idea was presented. We recognized this could be a great tribal opportunity. But we were also very clear we weren't just going to grow and sell pot," Brautman explains.
The tribe and FoxBarry investigated medical cannabis companies. "We looked at the market. Who were the medical cannabis companies? Who was doing research? Who was patient-oriented? Who was leading the way?" Canales explains.
The United Cannabis Corporation was the company that was selected as the consulting entity for the project. United Cannabis is a Colorado-based, publicly traded medical cannabis company (CNAB) that produces no recreational cannabis products. The company's stated focus is to utilize cannabis for medical purposes, refine and improve upon medical-grade cannabis strains, employ best practice industry principles and emphasize patient care.
Brautman and tribal members visited the United Cannabis facilities along with other dispensaries. It took Brautman only 15 minutes observing patients filling the medical aisles inside Colorado dispensaries to reach his own conclusions. "These were cancer patients. Suffering people. People in severe pain. They weren't there to get high. They were in line to solve medical issues."
"When we met everyone at United Cannabis, there was no talk about marijuana, but there was a lot of talk about medical cannabis. We feel that's the distinction between our project and other tribal cannabis projects. The United Cannabis folks have put an astounding amount of research into this. There's no one else producing a line of medical products of this purity and quality. We're proud to work with them as our consultants," Canales continues.
Canales stresses that staff from United Cannabis are strategic project consultants and not partners or owners in any form. "They are high-tech advisors with a proven track record who are supervising the growing, harvesting, testing and processing of the plants and the construction of permanent greenhouses and processing facilities."
The project is following guidelines set forth in SB 420, utilizing a collective-cooperative structure, along with a detailed 47-page tribal ordinance drafted specifically for the project.
"I was nervous at first. But we made sure that everything was going to be done by the book, and that I or anyone else wouldn't end up in jail," smiles Canales.
The tribe's ordinance replicates what is known as the "Cole Memorandum" – the 2013 U.S. Department of Justice memorandum which was issued to United States Attorneys to guide prosecutors enforcing civil and criminal cannabis investigations and prosecutions under the federal Controlled Substances Act.
The memorandum focuses upon eight priorities: no distribution of marijuana to minors; preventing criminal enterprises, gangs, and cartels from accessing cannabis revenues; preventing the diversion of cannabis from legal to illegal states; preventing state-authorized cannabis activity as a cover for other illegal drug trafficking or activities; preventing violence and firearm use when cultivating and distributing cannabis; preventing drugged driving or the exacerbation of other adverse cannabis-related public health consequences; preventing the cultivation, production, environmental hazards and public safety concerns on public lands, and preventing cannabis possession or use on federal property.
Additionally, the ordinance includes a 2014 memorandum from the United States Department of Justice titled Policy Statement Regarding Marijuana Issues in Indian Country, which states that the eight priorities in "Cole" memorandum will also guide cannabis enforcement efforts of US Attorneys in Indian Country.
This memorandum states each United States Attorney should consult with the affected tribes on a government-to-government basis when evaluating marijuana enforcement activities in Indian Country.
"Our tribal ordinance states that we will arrest any tribal member that takes even one seed from our garden," says Canales. "Again, this is not about recreational marijuana. We are instituting guidelines that are stricter than the requirements of SB 420."
The tribal ordinance states that all applicable taxes under tribal, state and federal law shall be collected and paid. A regulatory agency will oversee all aspects of the operation – from the type and quantity of all effluent to be discharged into the tribe's wastewater or storm-water system, the prohibition of adulterating medical cannabis with any chemical or other compound to alter color, appearance, weight or smell, the prohibition of on-site cannabis consumption and the ruling that all products will be produced with child-resistant packaging, designed not to mimic candy, cookies or other items attractive to children.
As the midsummer sun blazes on the Pinoleville Medical Cannabis Project's garden site, a young man holds a staff – pacing in a deliberate circle, playing a whistle-like pipe, offering up prayers and gratitude, honoring ancestors and invoking Spirit to bless the project. "We had a blessing today," says Canales.
Canales envisions many blessings for the tribe and the greater community. "We will be making lives better – through the medicines, employment opportunities, youth programs, infrastructure improvements, donations to local charities and better education and housing for our people."
"Our collective is 100 percent tribally owned – a non-profit, formed and owned under the authority of the Pinoleville Pomo Nation. We may be the first tribal collective in the nation. We'll certainly be the first tribe to produce organic cannabis medicine. That's what Mendo should be. The first."
CNAB-
Pinoleville Tribe’s ‘collective’ collaboration in development of medical cannabis project
Editor's note: This is the first in a six-part series of articles covering the establishment of one of the first tribal cannabis farming projects in the United States. The Pinoleville Pomo Nation is providing Ukiah Daily Journal readers with a first-hand, exclusive look at the people, the processes and the philosophical underpinnings of this groundbreaking project.
By Carole Brodsky
for Ukiah Daily Journal
"I admit that I'd drank the Kool-Aid like everyone else. We used to call cannabis locoweed. Once we understood this was the farthest thing from the truth, the tribe began moving forward. I was one of those detractors, until I saw and understood the entire cannabis story," says Mike Canales, president of the Business Board of the Pinoleville Pomo Nation.
Canales is referring to the shift in attitude that he and Pinoleville tribal members have undergone during the past year, as they researched and enlisted the assistance of cannabis experts to develop their own medical cannabis growing and processing operation on their reservation.
From the beginning, we only wanted to be involved with medicinal cannabis. Initially we discussed creating edible medicinal products. Regardless of what we did, we knew we'd need help – to learn to grow and make the medicine, to acquire the right equipment, find the right people and create the structure to run this operation. At that point, we brought Barry into the conversation," Canales continues.
Barry Brautman is the CEO of the FoxBarry Companies – a limited liability corporation providing tribal entities with development and construction of farming projects, casinos, fuel distribution and other services.
"We had already been discussing the casino project with the tribe when this idea was presented. We recognized this could be a great tribal opportunity. But we were also very clear we weren't just going to grow and sell pot," Brautman explains.
The tribe and FoxBarry investigated medical cannabis companies. "We looked at the market. Who were the medical cannabis companies? Who was doing research? Who was patient-oriented? Who was leading the way?" Canales explains.
The United Cannabis Corporation was the company that was selected as the consulting entity for the project. United Cannabis is a Colorado-based, publicly traded medical cannabis company (CNAB) that produces no recreational cannabis products. The company's stated focus is to utilize cannabis for medical purposes, refine and improve upon medical-grade cannabis strains, employ best practice industry principles and emphasize patient care.
Brautman and tribal members visited the United Cannabis facilities along with other dispensaries. It took Brautman only 15 minutes observing patients filling the medical aisles inside Colorado dispensaries to reach his own conclusions. "These were cancer patients. Suffering people. People in severe pain. They weren't there to get high. They were in line to solve medical issues."
"When we met everyone at United Cannabis, there was no talk about marijuana, but there was a lot of talk about medical cannabis. We feel that's the distinction between our project and other tribal cannabis projects. The United Cannabis folks have put an astounding amount of research into this. There's no one else producing a line of medical products of this purity and quality. We're proud to work with them as our consultants," Canales continues.
Canales stresses that staff from United Cannabis are strategic project consultants and not partners or owners in any form. "They are high-tech advisors with a proven track record who are supervising the growing, harvesting, testing and processing of the plants and the construction of permanent greenhouses and processing facilities."
The project is following guidelines set forth in SB 420, utilizing a collective-cooperative structure, along with a detailed 47-page tribal ordinance drafted specifically for the project.
"I was nervous at first. But we made sure that everything was going to be done by the book, and that I or anyone else wouldn't end up in jail," smiles Canales.
The tribe's ordinance replicates what is known as the "Cole Memorandum" – the 2013 U.S. Department of Justice memorandum which was issued to United States Attorneys to guide prosecutors enforcing civil and criminal cannabis investigations and prosecutions under the federal Controlled Substances Act.
The memorandum focuses upon eight priorities: no distribution of marijuana to minors; preventing criminal enterprises, gangs, and cartels from accessing cannabis revenues; preventing the diversion of cannabis from legal to illegal states; preventing state-authorized cannabis activity as a cover for other illegal drug trafficking or activities; preventing violence and firearm use when cultivating and distributing cannabis; preventing drugged driving or the exacerbation of other adverse cannabis-related public health consequences; preventing the cultivation, production, environmental hazards and public safety concerns on public lands, and preventing cannabis possession or use on federal property.
Additionally, the ordinance includes a 2014 memorandum from the United States Department of Justice titled Policy Statement Regarding Marijuana Issues in Indian Country, which states that the eight priorities in "Cole" memorandum will also guide cannabis enforcement efforts of US Attorneys in Indian Country.
This memorandum states each United States Attorney should consult with the affected tribes on a government-to-government basis when evaluating marijuana enforcement activities in Indian Country.
"Our tribal ordinance states that we will arrest any tribal member that takes even one seed from our garden," says Canales. "Again, this is not about recreational marijuana. We are instituting guidelines that are stricter than the requirements of SB 420."
The tribal ordinance states that all applicable taxes under tribal, state and federal law shall be collected and paid. A regulatory agency will oversee all aspects of the operation – from the type and quantity of all effluent to be discharged into the tribe's wastewater or storm-water system, the prohibition of adulterating medical cannabis with any chemical or other compound to alter color, appearance, weight or smell, the prohibition of on-site cannabis consumption and the ruling that all products will be produced with child-resistant packaging, designed not to mimic candy, cookies or other items attractive to children.
As the midsummer sun blazes on the Pinoleville Medical Cannabis Project's garden site, a young man holds a staff – pacing in a deliberate circle, playing a whistle-like pipe, offering up prayers and gratitude, honoring ancestors and invoking Spirit to bless the project. "We had a blessing today," says Canales.
Canales envisions many blessings for the tribe and the greater community. "We will be making lives better – through the medicines, employment opportunities, youth programs, infrastructure improvements, donations to local charities and better education and housing for our people."
"Our collective is 100 percent tribally owned – a non-profit, formed and owned under the authority of the Pinoleville Pomo Nation. We may be the first tribal collective in the nation. We'll certainly be the first tribe to produce organic cannabis medicine. That's what Mendo should be. The first."
Looks like a winner to me!
Glad I added in the way down! Shares I bought at 122 are making me money today. No doubt the ones I added at 125 will be soon! AAPL strong earnings we'll be between 130-140.
I loaded a few more this AM
I think the only reason that's news is because it's Apple. Windows is worse, and android OS is the most vulnerable OS EVER
It's a matter of time, it will continue to move forward and will be $$$$
The Pinoleville Pomo Nation runs its business operations from Ukiah, California and derives most of its revenue from its casino operations. The tribe had plans to set up a massive marijuana farm that would span over 110,000 square feet and consist of a number of marijuana greenhouses which would be responsible for supplying medical marijuana to the state of California.
The tribe had earlier decided to partner with an investment company based in Kansas who was willing to finance the project which was to be set up towards the north of Ukiah on the tribe’s rancheria. The tribe kick-started the project earlier this week but has decided to cut back on the scale of the project for now and start small.
The tribe has already created a non-profit organization that will be responsible for the medical marijuana project. The operation will be broken down into cultivating twenty five plants on each parcel of land spread throughout the ninety nine acre rancheria. Mike Canales who heads the business board of the tribe will be responsible for overseeing the project and wants to keep things small during the initial stages of the project to ensure that they stay well within the law and do not draw any un-necessary attention from the authorities.
The tribe also has the option of further expanding its marijuana project and using an additional 100 acres which is located close to a residential sub-division. Although the tribe owns this land, it has promised residents that it will not use this portion of the land for marijuana cultivation.
Voters in California are expected to have the final say on the legalization of medical marijuana or recreational pot during 2016 and many believe that it is just a matter of time before the law is changed. There are also a number of other states in the nation who are also debating the possibility of legalizing medical marijuana and if they decide to permit medical marijuana it could create a massive market for the cultivation and distribution of marijuana.
A number of tribes all over the nation want to capitalize on this potential medical marijuana market and develop another lucrative way of generating income. Tribes are currently making plans and looking for financial partners who will help them set up these massive medical marijuana farms on their reservations and help them be prepared to produce massive volumes of marijuana should the need arise.
The Pinoleville Pomo Nation wants to be cautious though as the tribe is still not clear what the law allows and does not allow when it comes to the cultivation and sale of medical marijuana. Canales recently met with Tom Allman, who is the Sheriff of Mendocino County but at the end of their discussion, both parties were unable to determine what is permitted and not permitted under law as of now.
The biggest dispute right now is based on the number of plants per parcel that is allowed in California. The Sheriff states that the tribe must abide as per the rules of 25 plants per parcel just like everyone else in the county but Canales disagrees with the stipulation stating that the tribe is a sovereign nation and does not have to follow the law set by the county. However for the time being Canales has agreed to go with 25 plants per parcel but plans to increase those numbers once he gets more clarification on the law.
The tribe has also confirmed that it has plans to construct a medical marijuana dispensary that will allow them to fill prescriptions that require pot-based pills and edibles.
I think things are going well. Others can doubt but the stock has plants on the ground on Indian land and they have not been cut.
Lol even I have to say that was funny
If plants are in the ground growing (1 over limit to test jurisdiction) and its silence. I consider silence GOLDEN
Any reason you can see??
The Supreme Court held, as the Cabazon band argued, that because California State law did not prohibit gambling as a criminal act – and in fact encouraged it via the state lottery – they must be deemed regulatory in nature. As such, the authority to regulate gaming activities on tribal lands was found to fall outside those powers granted by the Public Law 280.
Specific Case Law Below:
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_v._Cabazon_Band_of_Mission_Indians
The case law does not say gambling but rather better defines American Indian sovereign land- and that states can not infringe on it "specifically if it is legal in that state"