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Filing late report means nothing. This is something that has happened in the past. I'm pretty sure they are not the only OTC company to do so.
OTC Disclosure & News Service
View:ActiveInactive
Publish Date
Report Title
Period End Date
Status
Aug 14, 2017 Notification of Late Filing Jun 30, 2017 Active
May 15, 2017 Quarterly Report Mar 31, 2017 Active
May 15, 2017 Attorney Letter with Respect to Current Information - Amendment No. 2 Dec 31, 2016 Active
May 15, 2017 Annual Report - Annual Report - Amendment No. 2 Dec 31, 2016 Active
May 4, 2017 Attorney Letter with Respect to Current Information - Amended Annual Report Dec 31, 2016 Active
May 4, 2017 Annual Report - Amended Annual Report Dec 31, 2016 Active
Apr 14, 2017 Attorney Letter with Respect to Current Information Dec 31, 2016 Active
Apr 14, 2017 Annual Report Dec 31, 2016 Active
Mar 31, 2017 Notification of Late Filing Dec 31, 2016 Active
Nov 21, 2016 Quarterly Report Sept 30, 2016 Active
Nov 14, 2016 Notification of Late Filing Sept 30, 2016 Active
Aug 24, 2016 Quarterly Report Jun 30, 2016 Active
Aug 15, 2016 Notification of Late Filing Jun 30, 2016 Active
May 25, 2016 Quarterly Report Mar 31, 2016 Active
May 23, 2016 Research Report Mar 31, 2016 Active
May 12, 2016 Notification of Late Filing Mar 31, 2016 Active
Apr 13, 2016 Attorney Letter with Respect to Current Information Dec 31, 2015 Active
Apr 11, 2016 Annual Report Dec 31, 2015 Active
Mar 28, 2016 Notification of Late Filing Dec 31, 2015 Active
Nov 18, 2015 Quarterly Report Sept 30, 2015 Active
Nov 16, 2015 Notification of Late Filing Sept 30, 2015 Active
Aug 20, 2015 Quarterly Report Jun 30, 2015 Active
Aug 17, 2015 Notification of Late Filing Jun 30, 2015 Active
May 20, 2015 Quarterly Report Mar 31, 2015 Active
May 15, 2015 Notification of Late Filing Mar 31, 2015 Active
May 1, 2015 Attorney Letter with Respect to Current Information Dec 31, 2014 Active
May 1, 2015 Annual Report - GRNH December 2014 Annual Disclosure Report Dec 31, 2014 Active
Mar 31, 2015 Notification of Late Filing Dec 31, 2014 Active
Nov 19, 2014 Quarterly Report - September 2014 Quarterly Disclosure Sept 30, 2014 Active
Nov 14, 2014 Notification of Late Filing Sept 30, 2014 Active
Jul 31, 2014 Quarterly Report Jun 30, 2014 Active
May 22, 2014 Quarterly Report Mar 31, 2014 Active
May 15, 2014 Notification of Late Filing Mar 31, 2014 Active
A CLOSER LOOK AT THE OTC QUARTERLY FILING RULES:
With all the smack talk about GRNH, I wanted to find out more information regarding filing rules. It appears that GRNH has timely filed an extension to file the report late. (new deadline 8/18/17) Please see the proof from the OTC Market Website itself
OTC Homepage
"Financial Report Timeline for Maintaining Current Information (FY 12/31 Filers)
Fiscal Period End Date Report Type - Due Date
12/31/2015 Annual Report - 3/30/2016
Attorney Letter - 4/29/2016
3/31/2016 Quarterly Report - 5/16/2016
6/30/2016 Quarterly Report - 8/15/2016
9/30/2016 Quarterly Report - 11/14/2016
12/31/2016 Annual Report - 3/31/2017
Attorney Letter - 5/01/2017
*Companies following the Alternative Reporting Standard to maintain Current Information can file a Notification of Late Filing for an extension of 5 calendar days to file a Quarterly Report and 15 calendar days to file an Annual Report."
LINK TO OTC REGULATIONS
LINK TO GRNH OTC FILINGS:
LINK TO GRNH OTC FILINGS
NOTIFICATION OF FILING LATE (TIMELY FILING OF THE FORM)
NOTIFICATION OF LATE FILING
Back in the low 5's?
0.055 - 0.06025 Day's Range
Can you send me the list of stocks you are watching? NFairman1024@gmail.com
Trump’s Top Strategist Says He’s Trying To Convince The President To Legalize Marijuana
"Link is at the bottom"
"At exactly 4:20 p.m. on a beautiful Saturday afternoon in Pasadena, California, nearly a thousand people crammed inside a lecture hall to listen as five experts discussed the politics of “Weed Nation.”
Sitting at the center of the panel was a well-tanned man with firmly parted white hair and a matching cream colored, three-piece suit. His brow furrowed skeptically as he looked over the crowd.
“That guy in the center looks like he’s got a big stick up his butt,” said a woman sitting in the row behind me. Her friend laughed in agreement but whispered back, “Yeah, but his tie is really nice.”
The man in question was Roger Stone, who has been described as the “brains” behind Donald Trump’s unlikely rise to the White House. Stone, 64, has a notorious history in politics going back four decades to when he played a role in the re-election of Richard Nixon and currently finds himself embroiled in the Trump campaign’s Russia scandal.
But on this day, Stone was taking part in the third annual “Politicon,” a gathering of an estimated 10,000 political junkies who came out to hear pundits, policymakers, and activists debate the issues of the day.
To the surprise of many, Stone has become an outspoken advocate for the legalization of marijuana. And it’s something he says he thinks he can convince Trump to come around on.
“Medical marijuana is now a consensus issue in the United States,” he said during the panel. “And recreational marijuana is headed that way.”
Stone said he has filed a federal lawsuit with Florida attorney John Morgan that asks the government to remove cannabis as a Schedule 1 drug. That classification, first enacted under the Nixon administration, puts pot in the same category as drugs like heroin and cocaine. Morgan has invested millions of his own fortune fighting for the legalization of medical marijuana in Florida, the state where Stone now lives with his wife and family.
The duo recently formed a group called the U.S. Cannabis Coalition, which allows them to officially lobby the government, including Trump, on the issue. Stone is widely considered to be one of the most successful lobbyists in modern American history, even by his biggest critics.
Photo by Joshua Blanchard/Getty Images for Politicon.
Stone says he was motivated to act after Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced that he wanted to go after states that had voted to legalize medical and recreational marijuana. That position directly contradicts comments made by then-candidate Trump in which he said the issue of marijuana should be left to the states.
“I hope to convince the president of the United States to honor his pledge,” Stone said. “It’s time for the administration to speak with one voice and not break faith with the American voter.”
So, how did a man best known for electing men like Nixon and Trump get here? “Everyone evolves in their views,” he said. “If not, there’s something wrong with you.”
In an unusually personal confession, Stone explained that his own views changed after seeing his father and grandfather battling terminal cancer. “They were going through chemotherapy and radiation,” a visibly emotional Stone said. “You could smell them burning alive. That’s when a cousin of mine suggested trying medical marijuana. And yes, I got ahold of marijuana and gave it to them. It made a tremendous difference.”
Furthermore, Stone wasn’t shy about trash talking fellow Republicans who continue oppose marijuana.
On former President George W. Bush, he quipped, “The guy snorted so much coke, he had a personal thank you note from Pablo Escobar,” while also knocking Ohio Gov. John Kasich, claiming that Stone fired him from a campaign job in 1976 when he allegedly found out a young Kasich was selling pot.
Beyond his own personal connection to medical marijuana, Stone says it just makes sense for Trump to either fully support legalizing marijuana or at least get out of the way and allow the individual states to continue experimenting with their own laws.
Stone noted that in swing states that Trump narrowly won like Michigan and Pennsylvania, support for medical and recreational marijuana has been rapidly increasing and that cracking down on pot could doom Trump in 2020.
“A tidal wave is coming,” Stone said. “I predict the president will do the right thing.”
Share image by John Sciulli/Getty Images for Politicon."
https://www.good.is/articles/roger-stone-trump-marijuana" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" >https://www.good.is/articles/roger-stone-trump-marijuana[tag][/tag]
Can anyone tell what short interest looks like on this now?
Another article:
Strongest Signal yet that Congress Does Not Support Sessions’ Drug War Agenda
Today, the Senate Appropriations Committee voted by voice vote to approve an amendment that would block the Department of Justice from spending any funds to undermine state medical marijuana laws. The amendment – led by Senator Leahy (D-VT) – is a striking rebuke of Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who had personally requested that Congress eliminate the amendment and allow him to prosecute medical marijuana providers and patients. The amendment passed with strong Republican support, a sign that Sessions is isolated politically as rumors of a crackdown on marijuana businesses abound.
“The Senate is sending a clear message to Jeff Sessions – keep your hands off states that have reformed their marijuana laws,” said Michael Collins, Deputy Director of the Drug Policy Alliance’s Office of National Affairs. “Today’s vote is a huge win for the marijuana reform movement, because in the face of real pressure from the Department of Justice, the Senate has opted to block Jeff Sessions from interfering with any medical marijuana law.”
The amendment still has to make the final appropriations bill, but it has been added to the final government funding bill each year since 2014. The amendment is currently in effect after being signed into law this year, despite only receiving a vote in the Senate Appropriations Committee. The amendment – also known as Rohrabacher-Farr – has also been litigated in court with the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruling that, while the amendment is in effect, DOJ cannot prosecute individuals who follow state law on medical marijuana. Currently, 29 states have full medical marijuana laws.
The vote comes one day after the Department of Justice announced that the Attorney General would implement DOJ task force recommendations on a rolling basis. It is expected that one of the task forces will develop guidance on how DOJ will deal with states that have legalized marijuana.
Powerful Senate Committee Ties Jeff Sessions's Hands on Medical Marijuana
The Senate Appropriations approved an amendment to protect state medical marijuana patients this morning, delivering a setback to Attorney General Jeff Sessions. In May, Sessions delivered a letter to Congress specifically requesting that leaders reject that budget amendment, known as the Rohrabacher-Blumenauer amendment.
The amendment, led by Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT), passed in a voice vote with strong Republican support. During the hearing, Leahy said this in support of the amendment:
“29 states and the District of Columbia have decided it’s more humane to regulate medical marijuana than to criminalize it. Almost every state—46 right now, and counting—regulate the use of a marijuana derivative that is used to treat epilepsy and other rare medical conditions. I think just about every member on this committee represents a state with patients who would be protected under this amendment. The federal government can’t investigate everything. And shouldn’t. And I don’t want them spending money pursuing medical marijuana patients who are following state law, whether they’re an epileptic or whatever they might be.”
The amendment, originally known as Rohrabacher-Farr, has been adopted by Congress through budgetary actions every year since 2014. It prevents the Department of Justice from using any funds to undermine state medical marijuana laws. The Justice Department is the parent agency of the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA); it also oversees federal prosecutors around the nation.
The amendment still must pass as part of the final appropriations bill, but the Appropriations Committee vote is seen as a strong signal that Republican leaders are dismissing Sessions’ request.
Michael Collins, deputy director of the Drug Policy Alliance’s office of national affairs, called the vote “a huge win for the marijuana reform movement.” In the face of pressure from the Trump Administration, Collins said, “the Senate has opted to block Jeff Sessions from interfering with any medical marijuana law.”
n Rebuke to Sessions, Senate Committee OKs Medical Marijuana Protections
Where is the news on the DOJ report?
Wish I would have sold last night, so I could have bought back in at .32
Put fear into people to sell.
What does that mean?
http://www.otcmarkets.com/home
OTC closed.
Tagged is a social networking site that has nothing to do with this Company.
http://www.tagged.com/" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" >http://www.tagged.com/
Where is it. I just searched for it?
Best thing to do is to use the site.